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Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1844-11-27

Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1844-11-27 page 1

WEEKLY 0 0 JO RNAL VOLUME XXXV. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1844. NUMBER 16. PUBLISHED EVEKV WKDNKHDAY MOIININU, BY CHARLES SCOTT & CO. Office coruor of Highand Town ButUei' Building. TERMS: Two Dollar 1 rt.it ansim, which mud Invariably I paid in advance, free of postage, or of per carnage, to Agitata or Collectors. ... r Tlw Journal is also published dmly dunn tli nmn or the Legislature ; and thrice a week the remainder of the year for J5 end three limes a week, yearly, for THURSDAY EVENING, Novempbh 21, 1844. KI.K4 Tln KKW, Old ITlnMitchiiMtlie Forever! Tlw six towns mitttd by the exprosses of ihe Alias are in. Their atxreftale vole show a locofoco majority of 17. Bo the good old Hay Stale holdi fail to her nohh majority of nrry Jileen tkouiami for Clay over IMk! Several town have elefted Whig Representatives, not before mentioned. The Wide of Representative standi Whig l9j Loco A3. A HhmM from Ihe Grwa Moaatnlaa ! ITImmb-chsisell m Ira oat eclliwsl! We have received, through the lloitiin Alia, return from 145 lowm of Vermont. They show Ihe following glorious mull: Clay over nil .56 Hlade had in tntno lowm in August W2 Clay's net gain 4-1 At ihi rale Clay' majority over polk will not be leu than TWELVE or FOURTEEN THOUSAND in tlw Stale! Who would not fed proud lo be called a Vermont or Masso- chute l is Whig? NttW H AMPBHiBl. Full return! from this Stale make Polk's majority over Clay altoni H.OOOj over Clay and Bimry 6,114. North Carolina. Returns are in from all the cointint of Norih Carolina but one, ( Hyde.) Olny's majority now ii 4,000, which will bo furthur inercascd by Hyde aboul 300. PmnaYLVAMA ajjirlat. Polks mnjorily 6,333. This docs mil look much like the 30,000 or 40,000 thai Jackson use in receive From TkKMKMBK we have nothing laler than was given In our last. Louisiana. We have return from 27 prer inris of this Stale, Kivinir a Whig majority of about 700. There ure IJ more lo hrar from. The Whig papers do nol give up ihe Stale, hut il items probable (hat il hat gone for Polk by a very small majority, lest limn the illegal vote polled iu Plaque mine. The daring fraud perpetrated in thia precinct, hat cautcd in extraordinary degree of excitement in the Stale. Measures have beeu set on loot lo expose the whole trnntne-tion and, if possible, lo bring lo condign punishment Ihe scoundrels who have been engaged in it. Il excecas in nom- tifii anil hardihood any fraud ever In-fore perpetrated by a party that have winked at the giusscsl iniquity nil and again, llrary Cinr anal J. K. Folk. Who thinks lest of Henry Clay, now that the hope of fee ing him President of the United State, it loatf U'bobelievea him lew a Statesman, less an Oralor, lens a 1'atrioiT Ii value his patt tervices lest and f. rls let pride in having tup-poried itit-tl a manT Who would cherish a token from him leu, becnuc he ha been defeated iu the eonlt t for the l're idenry that hai jutlclotcdl Nolonc notorte! Hi praise are tlill on the. lotifnitii of million. His fair countrywomen fuel and deplore hi defeat a dreply an it is possible for their fathers, huthaiidl and brother lo feel it A bevy of beautiful girl in our cily were affected even lo tear, w hen the intelligence that all wa lol, wai conveyed lo their eari. The recollection of havinff contributed lo sentre him Ihe vole of thi Stale, if cherished by every Whig of Ohio at something thai he can tell with pride lo hit latest day. Though defeated, he l audi yel in ihe estimation of his friends, ihe greaietl man of the day. He it ttill Harry Clay, and there it but one. The boy ting iheir song m honor of hi name and fame at heartily at il he were now Presidrnt elect. At tbousnnd uf Hre-aidet the little one ehirp at aweelly at cvrr, "(lid bleti Harry Clay," "The noble Harry Clay." The little memento of the campaign Clay Portrait, Clay Dreaitpint, etc., are treasured at carefully and purr hated a eagerly a ever. A thmitand thing are daily transpiring and developing (hcniteke, showing that he has a hold on the affections of the people of this country, that no man hat secured before, tinre the day of Washington. Now turn we to hit nptmnnnl, James K. Polk of Tennessee. Who thinks mure of him tinre his election lhan he did before? Who hebeve lhat he hat entitled himtelf lo the dii-tiurlioa by any art of hit hle.orallof them combined! Who ean point to the evidence of hii filiiei, the patriotic love of country, the dittiaguithcd services that render turn wortliy ol the eialled station exalted still, though filled by a traitor whote name will gi down In pnie rily eomterted with all that ia despicable and vile. He is still James K. Polk, of Ten-neuee, the blind adherent of Andrew Jarknon, the invrrnlc partisan, Greaiuets hat been ihruil iiMn hnnj ami-high at is hit elevalioa be will he a pigmy tlill. His noniinnlion wat brought about by a shameful disregard of party inlrurikui, and hit election hit been consummated by the foulett meant. Thongh Preiiileul, he ha not a hundred devoted friend in the country, and unless he Mies the expcciniinnt of those who nom iiAlcd him, he will sink into obscurity at toon a hit term has closed, ramemlered only at Ihe forlorn hope of a distracted caucus. Who would not rather be Henry Clay, the private cilnea, than James K. Polk, the President of the United Statett Hirll tf the Ohio Whig Pre. There is something peculiarly refreshing in the spirit of the Whig Preit of Ohio at ihe present time. Deeply mortified al the result in some parts of the Union, our gnllnnl corps of editors undoubtedly are yet iiittead uf criminating and recriminating instead ol easting rrflueliout on their lets fortunate but equally deserving brethren and throwing down their arms In despair, they willingly, gladly bear letlnnoiiy 10 ine energy and fidelity of every section of the great Whig army, and breathe an unalterable determination to stand liy tnitr, principles and to wage unceasing warlare against those whose principlei are oVtlrurtivo of the prosperity and peace of the country. They are fontcioui of having achieved a noble victory in Ohio, and are fully sensible ol the importance of making a right use of that victory. They feel thut the intelligence and patriotism of the land it with them, and that toon-eror later those who have secured a triumph in ihe general contctl, by falsehood, blander and fraud, must bo hurled from power by an awakened sense of justice and right in the minds of ihe great matt of the people. Alive to the necessity of prudent councils, a conciliatory spirit, wisdom and firmness in the Whig ranks of the Stale, they are determined lo merge every selfish cuntidcrntion in & general effort to strengthen their organization, disicmmate light among Imt people, se cure the adoption of correct measures for the Slate, and render permaueiil the Whig ascendancy iu this great and grow- nig Commonwealth. Such a spirit must accomplish nil we need, all we hope for. Let it be cherished, and let our Slate Legislators bring to their important labors the same disposition, nud all will 1)0 well. From the many paragraphs on our table, from mir ex changes, we cau only find room for the following, loday : From the Springfield Republic. The Whig pmty, though "cast down," is far from being destroyed. It hot known darker hour thmi lh present, even wiilitu the brief limn of our participation in it triumph and deleult. And it never was stronger than it in to-day. It never gave more voles lltnu il ha juM done. Its prinriplct never purer, not even in the. simple of '1ft. Those principles, we are firmly convinced, will ) el tie in the ascendiint and raise the Wing parly into power, Just as surely as the ( iovcrnnienl stands lor ihe Government was originally built upon ihein. Lei no one, then, ilesiMiml. l.el us watcii the conquerors closely, nud hold them lo ihe pomiions as timed by them dur ing Hie eaiivnn. e must not ureim our lines we must inn slack our organisation we must not tessrn our vigilance, If tint Whigt are quiet, firm, wise, and fnitbliil to their principles, they will yet enjoy iiituiy proud victoriet, which shall bless ilie land with prosperity. Most especially should the Whigs of Ohio stand fast and firm. Their rolnmn i unbroken. Their division ot the great Whig nrmy is triumphant. We hold the Government ol our Moved Stule in our hands. Let us nol lighlly risk the rich possession. Let no temporary excitement drive ut into a position whote we could not maintain ourselves mid preserve our MiHer, and whence wo should find loo late thai mo could not withdraw. Whig lo be a Whig to feel like a Whig lo fight like a Whig is glory enough lor nuy Auierirnn citizen. Lei us stand fast llien, here in Whig Ohio, by Whig principles, mid preserve uur organization unimpaired. From the Dayton Transcript. Now and then we hear from the lips of some more timid Whigs, l lie doh'I'ul excldinalioii. "let ns dishand," Disband! I Join utter the word. Unhand! The vtordMtund lmrhly. We don'i like lo hear il. Burnish up your armor, ye gnlliinl Whigt ol Ohio, and march agiiin lo ihe rontbcl. Although a cnlanuloot defeat, (in Ihe din lul evil of which you will have lo fdinru, so far as ualioual ntl'air are concerned,) has overln ken your brethren in oilier Smtes, yel al home you stand lonli far advanced on the v;int;ige ground of victory and triumph. Here nl home, all is right nil i well. You enjoy ihe proud sati-l'action of having done your duly, and uu ly have you sustained oiir principl. s. And ol those principle you may alo lc proud. They are the political tall, whirh alone can save this country from utter ruin. Then maim m n (hem, and iniiiiilain them inviolate. Keep up your nrumiizniion, and never lor a moment turn a-side alter ihis or thai iim. Il i your duly to make constant war upon LocoforoiNin , and reae nol the contest till the loul monsler Iw extirpated irom the laud, and truth shall reign in-uniplinul. True, lor four yenrs lo come, you will have to live under a President, given you lor the first time by foreign in-fhinice and foreign voles, b'lt know you not, lhal thai Itrtii-h President and his iiarasite in t'liinrresM, ae rendered iiower- less, as to any yntitirt niischief liiey might do, by a Wing Senate Though Texas may be annexed, yel the odious Sub-Treasury law can never lie pxs-d, nor enn the W'h'g Tariff of lli 'l l rrjiettkd. That they date not do dare nol :eiiipt. The Whir MM v. then, is the great ronservalive party of the Union. Let il maintain it inieitriiv.aiid ere lone, the honest ol all parties will come to it aid and save the Union from H'struction. II me i.oroiocm auu ineir lureign nines ran vc under ihe reign ol King Hickory ihe second, surely Ihe Whim can. And thoiurh t uc wheels ofbosincss may Hon, or he rendered nugatory, by the weighty clogs of Lucoliieuisin, yet we have a country and a government worth saving. W'higt of Monljiomcrv county Hit Ohio of the Union, let ut save it, ami enjoy iho proutl alifnriion of transmit ling :t in ill H primiiive piiniy iu inure generations. Your name, WIIK1, it a tower ol strength. Il enllsup the spirit of nor Washington our Madi suns our Adamses ami an ine nosi ol our iievoiuiiouary sire. uen lorsnae not iho name. It associations are glorious and hearl-ttirring. Deleat nh il, is more desirable than v trior v, under the black banner of Texas and l.ocoformsm, although tinseled over with the false and hpocriliral draiicry of modern Democracy, From Ihe Snndu.ky Clarion. Here in Ohio, ihe party slaudt uonu hieh gmund, and pos sesses the means if doing much for ihe(niblic welfare. This, alone, is a snnVicnt tiiducemenl lo keep op a thorough and 'Inrii'iil orgam Kaiion. Iiulepeiiilenl ot ihe union, we Have a oinplele roveruitieiil, and il is eomnleu-lv in our control. We hope it will lientiniiuistereil wisely, without liar or favor. and thil it will le always ready to aid lint Union when it shall demand its assistance, or he in a condition lube benefited by its exertion. (School nks. We have received from Iho publishers, Messrs. Grigg ol Elliot, Philadelphia, six numbers of ltuscil KNHERQKn't series of Books on the subject of Natural History, embracing those mutt generally adopted as text books by touchers. The introduction of this scries of books into our Schools is a matter of iutrresl, and we are glad lo know ihul our enterprising publishers and liook-tellers in Ihis cily, Mettrt. Whiting Huntington, and J. II. RUrtf, arc prepared to antwer any orders for Ilium. The scries consists of eight numbers, embracing the following subjects, with engravings illustrative of ihe lexi, each complete in itself, lo wit: I. Elements of PttTiini.onT and A. H atom v. 1 Elements of Mahmaluoy Natural History of Quadrupeds.3. Elemnls of OnsiTimi.ocr Natural History of Biidt. 4. Elements of H:RrKTi)t.iMiY and km iiTui.uuv Natural History of Reptiles and Fnhet. 6. Element of CuSCHul.iiG v Natural History of Shvlls and Mollusea. G. Elements of EktomuMjuy Natural History oflntecls, iVc, 7. Elciiienlt of Botakt Nntural History of Plants. 8. Eli' men t of Ukoluuy Natural History of the Earth's structure. The tettimoninla of teachers and scientific men to the value ol these icvernl works, am numerous. A Kr.w work on Baptism, bearing iho following title, has just been publiilicd by Mr. Derby of Cincinnati, and Ap- plrlon.of N. York : "Crilicnl Exposition of Ilnplism; embracing the Mosaic Baptisms) Jewish Traditionary Baplitini; John' Baptism, and Christian Baptism clearly establishing the Scriptural authority of Affusion and Sprinkling, nnd of Infant Ilnplism." By LKltesTKn A. Sawykk. A. M., President of Central College, Ohio. We have been thus particular in transcribing the title page of this work, owing lo our inability to give it a critical examination and extended notice. The tille explains Ilie character and design of the work. How well ihe author hat succeeded, in the 200 pages of (hit little volume, in sustaining and establishing the positions ho hnt assumed, we leave tho reader to decide. This much we may say. The work is well got up iu good muslin binding and on good paper. The style of the author it eminently attractive and impressive. He has aimed lo be practical, and has so arranged nnd systematized ihe matter of lit work, ns lo impress nud enforco nil he advances. He divides and sub-divides his subject and simplifies as far as is consistent with Ihe comprehensive design lie hat in view. Ho goet over Iho whole ftidd of tins interesting branch of I Polemic Theology, and en trenches hi position with all the weigh! of authority nnd force of argument of which it is susceptible. Tho standing and acknowledged ability of Mr. Sawyer will secure for his book an extensive circulation ; and itt moderate price will place it within ihe reach of all. Il ia for sate al the Book stores of thin citv. A PnrnarBtih Hint Merita ut Rxplnnnlloti! Vole of thu Five Point Districts (New Yo-kf (:ld of Sinh Ward) Clay, ltl.3; Polk, C68 NEAHLY FOUR ro ONE." ', re for lhr oor" sir The laboring men of the land must leel under many obliga tions to the editor of the Slates man who, after doing his best lo prnslrale their Inhor, and bring litem down lo ihe European standard, now turns round nnd exult over iheir calamities. ID" The Statesman says lhal Mr. Cby pledged himself to the principles of Ihe Nnlivo American. The assertion is without Ihe least foundation tn truth cut out of w hole cloth. 'anuot iho Statesman py some regard for truth, now the election i over t (CT'l'lio Statesman asks" What now becomes of the Whig (icrmmi paper of Cincinnati 1" It will continue lo iftttle for Whig principles and expose Iho inconsistencies, fraud nnd iniquities of Locnfoeoisia And right good aer- icewill it do loo, as the Statesman will hud. Tho Prise Raaarr, The Harrison Co. Kepuhltcnn " and the Morgan Co. Mndepciidenl," wish lo e informed through the Journal, as lo Ihe disposition of the Pnte Banner proffered by the State Central Commuter to Ihe Whigt of that County that should give " the greatest increase per centum vole for the Hectors who may cast iheir votes for Henry Clay, over the votes rail for the rlectort of (Jen. Harrison in WW." lite Slate Committer will probably decide the m niter in a day or two. The gallant W higs of Harritou and 31 organ have en titled themselves lo lasting honor, but at we have not inslilu- led a comparison, we cannot say which it ihe ' Banner Coun ty " of Ohio. The prise will lie awarded to llmto who have won it un Iho day ihe Preiidentiol Electors cast their volet for Pretideul of the United Stales, iu this city. Tho Trloaaph of Ike Press Trnslera. We give below, paragraiih from the Charleston Mercury ( Mr. Calhouu's southern organ,) of the lth inst , tail forth, il will be sera, after the result of the election bad been ascertained. How will the announcement he received in poor, swindled Pemisylvamaf How would the declaration lhal the triumph of Mr. polk is a Fiuk Thahc triumph, look even in the columns of a New York or Ohio paper! What would have been ihe effect of such an intimation thrown out before election in any ol the middle or northern Stalest What would have been said by the thousands of latwtrrr of Pennsylvania, had a letter been produced from Mr. Polk announcing his de termination in case of election, to gn for a rvpen pftht 7.i-rif, Frtt traitt, fft t l.et those wlio were told before election, lhal Mr. Polk was as friendly u I'tvirrlitm as Mr. Clay, answer these questions, in view of ihe following: The mails of vrsterdny removed all doubt. Tlie Empire State ha given Polk and Dallas a majority of thousands hid, wuh the exception of Norlh Carolina, which loo show a decided turning hark to I lie right, the whole South is muled for 'Fm Tratit, Low Duties. No Debt, rVpainlioii from Bauks. Economy, Ucirt'iichmcui, ami a strict adherence to ilie loiisiiiution.' tL7The Daily and Weekly Wmu Stathmtid, an able an untiring ndvornteof Whig principles, hitherto piil lislieil at Washington City, hat been discontinued. We regret this. 'be Standard has not received ihul patronage il deserved, and we are not without hope that il will lie teedily revived. '1 he following are the closing paragraph ol Ihe valedictory uf ihe editor : Should ii Im fiHtitd advisable, at a future and not remnle ilay, after the Whig from various parts of the country have had lime to interchange, sentiments, lo resume the publication of ihi paper, and iirner exertion are male lo give it a pa- innings- tutu "in jip mc iiiMirriuiiiK, wc nui mrri urn call wuh pleasure. N'ollung is more congenial lo our feelings, e conies, irian lo give constaNf, uMinnr, ami as inr as m us lies, wtH-ttimeii baitle lo ltcofoeoitm. Sixincr or later it stiff nisx dutrn; and although we are not able to foth'W ftp the cA'ite, wr are detvrminiil lo be in ut lite nV'iJA, lo partake of the heartfelt njoicing which will then make lira whole heaven )olul, and a redeemed, regenerated, nnd dMCii-thralled " people glad! I n our hreinr'ii ol ine to press, we tewier our sine' re nnd hearlfelt thanks. We hoiie and trust lhat earh and all :if them may continue to uphold the Gimp oi.n causk, and that they will press forward with aval, niaiuiiuiiuig the just principles of Ilie Wmu taktv. UTT There is a good deal of point and no little truth in the following from ihe St. Louis Republican. Although a good ways off, the editors of the Republican rightly appreciate llw importance of the victory liiey have achieved to the people of Ohm: 7V Oli i eiettion is Important in many points of view, hut pnrnrul irly as it kills off a el of tlie most vile oliiician that er atriictmi any state, "i.ow ages' i aptuiu ta lain on ihe thrlf; a mnrk it put on Mr Nutty by his own neighbor and associate ( Medary, who has published more lies in the niaiesntan tnan annosi any oilier meoiorn ninnr in the country, will be ousted from his birth of State printer, in hich he has fleeced die Slate without merry, and (nils, alto, of bring rleetefl lo the I 'titled Slates Senate and Brotigh ill no longer be Auditor of Ohio. Hundred of such cattle w ill )m di sm i nod from the ihi!. lie charge, and honest men w ill lake llieir places. The effect will ho of inralrulabla advau luge tu the State, in a moral, politiral and financial view of the case, and we rongraiulalo the projilo of Ohio on having thrown off such a mu of iniquity. Ilrttrr lav Tltose who wish It. call to mind the Waring of Mr. Clay under adverse circumstances, will remember lhat he ia the same man now thai he was in III 13, when, after being huulcd for twenty years by the bloodhounds of parly, be returned lo Kentucky, and with an eloquence and au energy whirh no modem mau ran rival, addressed his cuntiiiueuta and neigh bort: " Il is now more than forty year,' said Mr. Clay, " since ! came here a poor and friendless youlli. 1 w as taken by the hnnl by your fathers, and led lo fame and fortune. All lhal 1 am and have been, I owe to Iheir generous kmdnett and steady confidence. And now I have come to spend the evening of my day among their children. I feel like the ttag who has been king hunleo, mid who return, at last lo die upon ihe ipM whence he tinned in vigor and hope. The ems of party have beea lour barking nl my heelt, and the hlood hounds of personal malignity are springing al my throat, but rising to hit full height, and looking round with flashing eye on hi detainers, who hail moigled with the crowd ol hearers, i Mem una y fat now at t ever id ." Old Hoi Ysttjui HlrkorTt Put.a'tv own State rejects htm, Thi was not (he way Krniueky treated Hxanv ('lay in IKR, wlien the elected a Loco Oovemour, hut Tennostee, the Hermitage District, (the residence of Uen. jAratog ,) has turned on the old hero, and gives an increased Whig majority for (lay. In IBhl, Junes received in this precinct H3 ynie, Polk M. Now, Clay receives 116 votes, Polk Mil Was there ever a more pointed and galling rebuke 1 Davidson county, in which is situated Nashville, and in which the Old General resides, gives In Clay the aame tnajoriiy that il gave to Jouea, lo wit, fivt dresl and EigHtylhrtet rVnllra Amrrlrnst Olebrttilosi In If. York The New York paper contain a description of a procession, etc., got up by die Natives of lhat city, in honor of ihe victory achieved in the election of Iheir Congress and Rrpr-eatativa lirkeL, The turn out wai large, but not at large a peeled. There wtrt delegations present from several of Ihe neighboring cities and towns. Addresses were delivered and resolutions adopted. An viptotiou look place on board of a model ship drawn in the procession, through the carelessness of n cigar amoker. Seveial persoua were seriously injured one or two fatally, It it feared. Mir mo A a1 l.toitl.ATl'Rlt. Tht Senate will be unanimously Lorofneo It in all. It Wat the same last year. The House will stand 44 Locolocot lo !) Whigt. AlfiliilioBi of thfi Prraldrttllnl 4HrloN A few ofiaiririendsol ihe preis areagiiatingthequelion Who shall be the next Whig candidate for the Presidency!" Of emirte those editors, thus engaged, are exercising a privilege lielonging to all. Of lite propriety of involving the coun try in another contctl at this time, there is room for very te rious doubt. Let us preserve the integrity, tho harmony of the great Whig WMy. This should lie the great object of our labor now. There will be no difficulty in accomplishing it, if we pursue Ihe course dictated by prudence and sound Mil-icy. The country needs our serviret The enemies of her prosperity niid peace are iu the ascendancy in Ihe Councils of the Nation. I hey must he watched, checked, cxpotcd. They must be held lo a strict accountability for i II iheir tint of o mission at well commission. Plus duty, if well performed, will require our undivided attention, If we involve ourselves in a controversy about the succession, thus eaily, its only effect will he lo distract our attention and divide our sirrugth There ia a time for all things, and a great abundance ol il yel remains, for Iho eonsidcraliiw of the question "Wlto shall bs) Ihe next Whig candidate for the Presidency'" A Mini to llrary t iny. The Whigt of Philadelphia and New York are seriously considering a proposition for raising a fund of 530,000 for the erection of a itnlue in honor of Mr. Clay, Mr. Clay will live longer in ihe heans of hit countrymen lhan hi hfrlet marble. History will take rare of hi fame, and posterity will appreri ata hit worth. Yet, we cannot but regard with approbation Ihe suggestion of ihr Philadelphinntand New Yorkers. Hen-ry Clay need no evidence lo convince him of the devo-liou of hit friritdt, but he deserves such a token of the love of htt countrymen, and it could nol bul awaken pleasing emotions in hit patriot heart. If I tie proposition is carried out, Ohio will ask the privilegt of ruutrihuiinf, a lilwral portion of the requisite turn. She has twice declared her attachment to ihe man, and she will not bo behind hnr titters in any move ment in honor of hit illustrious name ami scrvires. Crreip0Hdritc4 mf thm ? HlaU Jmmrmmt. Buffalo, Nov. 15, 1844. Since my last, the political contest in the several Stales has been to far concluded, na lo "settle iiidical.ons" pretty clearly, in regard to Uw national result and the disastrous cotise-quencen of these indications are a'ready apparent in the depression of ihe fanning interest We are now upon the very eve uf the close of uavigaiioit both Itike and canal the precise moment when produce always experiences an improvement in price. But die sue rest of "Free-Trade" doctrines nl the (lolls, has revcrirtl thia order of things, and we nro about iu close produce operations for the season, with a all' ittfr mu ktt! The subjoined prices before and since the elec-t.oii, will show the state of iho market Imlh in New York and Hull'nloj und they fully sustain my position, singular as such depression may apjK'nr. New York quotations on Nov. first, gave Hour hi $l,H to 4 ,1)7.J, end wheal at $ I ,l per bushel. Un the liiili an interval of eleven dnvs, tlw election having intervened flour stood nl Jjt'l,fi.'$. and wheat was sold al ilJ els. Al Buffdo. oti die 3j ol Oct. flour wasbrisk at SU. and w heal at hi c la. Yesterday nnd to-day ihe top of die market is $ to $ L.03 for flour, and If) ris. lor wheal. Wool has suffered still more. Indeed the fall uhii this article is re-nlly ruinous. The lulest published prices show a decline of five cents per pound, nl Albany bul our dialers have nil vices by w hu h liiey are now governed, in refusing lo purchase, except at viill greater reduction. In anticipation of tho repeal of the Tariff, we henr lhal everywhere al the east, preparations are being made to meet lhal national calamity. This it ia which has shaken the market; the destruction of the home market we have enjoyed, must needs leave a vast supply of food and of raw materials lor matiuiucttiriiig upon ine nanus oi me prouueers, woe mi-ded iu the surplus of the next crop. Every one fears to invest in new manufacturing establishments; and here there ia a teueral abandonment of all arrangements for the erection of new cotton or woolen mill, cVc, to far as we have heard. In thit city a lot had lieen selected, and much of l lie slock iihsrrihe.f. for a second colloo farloiy; but the turcest of "Tree-Trade" bus sloped all, and vetoed the wholo under-Inking.In oolitic, vou see the Empire Stale has nominally gone for Po'k. 1 tay nominally, because I find ait no not think New Voik ha so gone, in Inrl. I o lie plain, there nie some strange sR'Culiitioiis alloal, iu regard lo coming event. You well know thai Ihe delegates of New York lo the Baltimore Convention were pledged to sustain Mr. Van Burent and the deep hearl-biiriiiiig of dial gentleman's friends at hit avm- aged ilelent. have never lieeu made a secret, wen: rtvtngt is notr within thrir vower. By casiiue ihe vole of New York for Mr. Van Burnt. Ihev deleat Mr. Polk's election by ihe Colleges, and catry the election into the House, lo which hit nnme mui pc retained wtin roia nun I lay. i ins wonm give die Moose an opportunity 'he northern Loco unit Whigs combining in gel rid of Texas, and lo throw ihe wholo toulheru mai hiiiery overboard, by milling Mr. Van lluren again in Ihe Presidential Clia r. Such a union, at a rlaticeof evil, would be very likelv, it is argued, to take pi are. Nol only would it get rid of Texas, but il could hardly lad to save Ihe Tariff iiiiisiiitirh as no combined aitark upon thai, by a conin!lerit force for its overthrow, could then he made. The argument, namely, lhal this would cause a breach between northern and touiljern loco locos, is met by Ihe fuel lhat nothing whatever can avert that catastroplte, the seeds of which are a heady sown, and will shoot vigorously during Ihe Congressional session of the ensuing winter. The great fear of the minor norlhcm loco is, that Mr. Calhoun will be, in fart, President, by having Ihe confidential cur of ihe President elecl. This ihe northern lenders well know he will have and therefore Ihcy do not share the fear, bul realize the pos livo dread of lh- consequence. They seem lo be well aware, loo, that one of these consequences u'lll be a deaf ear and a cold shoulder lo Itn-m at ihe White House: and that the Nulhlier II push h ultra plans of tout Item domination pi a point which will be ruinous to themselves, if not in the Union. All this i rank ling in the bosoms of Mr. Van Buren's friend nud has prohiilily given rise to the thought lhal an nmlmsh at-tnrk may overthrow the man who has lieen forced upon Ihein, and trail der victory to their own slandurd al the very moment when all tupHied ihem disM'rvd m foil retreat. W heiher siirh a blow is lo lie virmk, of course I have not the meant of kliow-ins; I onlv know that the sagacity of ihe old Albany Itcgeucy hat been seldom al limit m seeking il ow n advancement; and there are iliosriHiloiieitig to their par ly, who would nol liesilate to appiauil Ihe patriotism ol torn an art, ns a means of averting uulional calamines which are now viewed very dilTerenily as approaching realities, from what they wero w hilu they only eri,iiued to the contingent tuiure. fV tit I to AsMericamiam lit ' Inr Install. The Commercial It ul let in, of Cincinnati, hilherio a neutral paper, hat adopted a new name and with it the prinriplct of the American Hrpublican (tarty. It is now railed "Amtri ran HfpuNkan tMMin." Iu editors have heretofore be longed to the iocnfoco parly, as we Irarn from llw Atlaa. Humored Aooolnitarttlt The Cincinnati Uaiellt of yesterday says thai it is reported that Dr. N. M. Mills., of Columbua, brother-in-law of ih President, has boon appointed by him Second Assistant post, mailer General, in place of J. W. Tvtoa, resigned. Wa give the rumor for wbai it it worth, Stranger things lhan thit hae happened. Encoi'H A(K Your, own. Those who need ihe service of n Culler, or waul a first rate article of Cutlery, ran lie accommodated by our friend FfcHTOit, on High, second door Mow Rich street, Mr. F. is a good mechanic and deserves encouragement. H arfkr's Ii.i."mikatki BiBi.it." No. It. hat been received by our friend Ki ley, ol this city, al hi bookstoie. A lllnrlt 1 ampler, " ' " And all the People said Amen!" Lost nr La nun to MrXHAKirs. We areinfoimed upon unquestionable authority, lhal three Merchants tn this city had contemplated building, or having built, each, a ship apiece hi case ol the election ol Henry Clay lo the Presidency. Since, however, it has lieen rendered ct rlain lhal Mr. Polk is elect- est, they have abandoned the idea, fearing that the pohev wmcn win ie puisueo ny mm ami his uim, woo hi so jurai-ne busiiiesa nd commerce, as to render ilie enleriirtie coo- leinplaied by them uuprofuabfo. Thus have Ihe nierlianies and latnireri of Fell s Point, in ihis one inslarco, been de- prived the opHirtumiy of otHaiuing employ ami sharing in Hi ilistriouliiiii ol al least sixty iiiousaito tioiiars. e are well assured lhal Ihe gentlemen who purposed Unhliug these vessels, woolii have entered into couiracts lor tiavnig them I in i U iuimetliAlely nfier it had been anuoimced lhat Henry I "lay had been chosen lo prcsidu over Hut Nation as its Chief Magisirate. W helher tunes will he any worse nr nol remains lo lie ex perienced. One thing however is certain, that such men as those nientioneil above, who, lo n great rairnt, eomim ttlui wily, have airealy hist commence, and wilt, we have i douhl, wiltioiil llieir means, from nut course we tear rv nint h many will have rnii to reerel lhal they voted for James IV. rolh. tiattimore i' at tun. PftuJrrT Kftorar.D in tiik llr.Ali. We understand that arrangements had nearly been completed lo start a large oollcii mnuiitnrltiriiig etinhlishmeiil in this city , with a cai- lal ol st(Kt,tai, ilie luumlaliou oi wmrn woum have net-n laid this IhII, bill ns the people of the United Stales have de cidrtl in favor of ihe Bnlih mamilarturet, the design will be aiiamloned. l hu an annual tiistriiMtiion oi irom twenty to thirty thousand dollar in wages, whirh would have found iheir way to our merchants, tailors, shoemakers, cVc, and ihe Inrmert in our vieuuly. is prevcnlcil, and die money will in stead lie shipped lo pay the wng.-s of British operalives. ii was m emis uera ion oi in s iarr. orimao v. uiai a tour- nevmaa slioeuiaker't shop in this cily was ilhiiniualvd on lliurMlay evening, l (icii atttt. Tiik Broianina. The probnbiliiyof Polk's election has couipelk-d tevei nl large manufacturers in this and Albany eiiuniie lo adopt measures for the immediate curtailment ol tlwir business.-1 roy ( iV. i f ii atg. Tnr. Ft RT Fruits Several capitnlistt, who had inten- tied lo rxiM'iid more lhan a million of dollars in Ihe erection of iron and other establishment in Ihe Valley of Virginia, have given up their projects, tinre trie result of ine t'tesiiii ii lial election has been known. So with a contemplated out lay iu cot lou and woollen manufactories m lite neighborhood ul HnriH-r' Ferry. 1 tut may Do eaiien an euon to rrenir a ptinir ; nui ii ine statement of farts have lhat effect, we cannot help it. Tlir blesainga of Loeoloro insinbibty in public alUirs are yel lo lie developed in many wajs. Hinrhcffcr ( IVt.J Repub. We have hrnnl of contracts in this cily for building. See,, amounting to some 12 or I.V0"0 dollars, which have been abandoned on hearing lhat Mr. Polk was circled. It was in tended also lo (Hit the ttlas Works ami lotion ear lory into oietaiiou. Ihilh are aoandonnl h nt ting nme$. We learn that purchases of land and iron ore banks have been made in Ballunoru county, and lhal the necessary preparation were in a it ate of great forwardness to creel two extensive iron works, one on ihe York turnpike, and ihe other in a difli reni direnmn, w hich were in have oceii put tn oiie ration without delay. I he ticieai oi air. i My, ami ine apprehension of a reduction of the present duly on iron h-ive mused the projectors to uivmi operations, and we Irani lhal ihe projects, if nol abandoned nliogelhi r, w ill at least be n Mandril lor some lime. Tin parties concerned in these en- leiprises are entirely di.linct. Each of these contemplnled esiablishment would have given employment lo a large mini- le r of workmen, ami ImmI to nearly one tlioiisaiul persons, nnd would liesoh-s have added lo tlw wi-aUh of thu com. try and .State. Halt. Amir, The Troy patter announce thai a factory building in lhat town has been tlioroiiliiiued, making two tins week. Another has been slopiei al Rochester, and one at Rahway. Ibid. The Troy Whig Bays nnte of the Locofuco friends of ihe Tariff who voted for Polk, excuse themselves for ihul senseless suicide by saying lhal then knew the Setfcire would he It Vr, ami therefore, the Tariff would be taken care of, it Mr. Polk ami the whole anti-Tariff ticket w.re elected ! That it what we call pretty cool, al any rate. They could trust to Iho W lugs lo save diem ami ihe rotuilry from entire tk'slriic-lion, while they indulged themselves in the luxury of doing all they could tndrstioy it. Il was. we tupmr. on the same priiK-iple lhal llw l.ixrty party voted for the Mact eaudidaie. Aa ArkuotvlfltnrHl "Whig ndinilled freely all the evil of Slavery, and ihtta imposed umhi it Ihe duly of presenting Mr, Clay , who they called ihe embodiment '( iheir prmt iplet, according to the stale of factt. In doing to, we were coniH'lled lo carry ihe war, even mln Ihe enemy s ramp, and use fact lhal demo crats could not use, because they wereenunlly guilty ; to lhat tho Whigs may ihnnk themselves, and Mr. Clay may thank hit friemit, if Lilteriy men have, in any way, contributed to his defeat Morning Herald. Here ts an admission limi ine mug were rernrnen aa enemies" that the Liberty party carried tho war into the cnemv's camp," and thus "eoiiirihnird lo his defeat" (Mr, Clay's Very wed. This we knew More ( bul place it upon ireoni now, as pan ot inn nisiory ni ie nines. I hit plan w or ken very well in new i ork atler Air. nir I ney's mission ; Ihii nol quite tn well in I lno. We shall see 1 whal llw LiWrty party make by an avuwal of hoslthly lo llw things. tin. s.nrjn. Ohio. The ofilcial vole has nol yel been piihlisl.ed. hut wr think Mr. Clay's majority will reach 7,000. Nobly have the Whigs icrformrd their duty in this Slate. Il it a source of i nile ami satisfaction to every Unman, lhal while so many of her sitter Slniet have deserted iheir principles and covered themselves with dishonor, Ot io hat remained firm, and comes out uf the conflict virtorioii with her bnnnert living, Mednry aptieali lo his Locofuco brethren lo redeem the Stale! Heautijui Rt demption! It amounts to no more nor Irss thanthe're-rlec-imn ol the State Printer and the division nf thesnoilsofollirr ! W e have lieard hat one imriNMe ei ores veil bv the Whim, and that it, lhat as Ohio it unquestionably Whig, to she shall forever remain, Oir defeat in the Union maket il doubly im portant that the State should he W'hig. W have long been the victims of aditatlmut Stale policy, and now that we have ihe power let us flxercisei it in behslfof our own domestic interest!. Deserted bv the General (iovemment, let us lake rare of ourselves. Our foot is on the neck n lcofocmm in Ohio and lei it never be removed. Keep it down, and never lei iit hydra head be reared again Lebanon Star, From Ui New York Tnbuno. Honor lo the Patriot. The Philadclphians, we understand, contemplate a grand id tillinc letlimonial to our Ureal Statesman. They pro- nit raising, by small aiibseriptioiii none to exceed five dol larsthe sum of l went v thousand dollars, to he paid to Pow ers, 'he Sculptor, for a ttatuc of Mr. Clay, to be placed in a suitable building in one of the public aquarrs of the city. Probably since the death of Ihe Father ol hit Country there has never at any time lieen aorrow so pervading nnd to profound that winch loitovva ine discovery inai mr. slat uucicaieu. The intelhirenl and riithl-minded regard hiin with an affec tion which no oilier public man ever inspired, and which it only surpassed by lhal devotion to country which induced ihe de-tire ol hit election to the Presidency. Henry Clay is defeatedworse than thai, the People are defeated and the last suffer. For him Ihe Presidency had few If any attractions, except inch aa it wat invested with by patriotism. It could add nothing to his greatness or lo his reputation. Who would nol rather be, Henry Clay than be Pretulcnlt II there be ny turn, we pity mm. now true, now mum truer man ever before, are the following lines by Whillier: 'HE IS NOT FALLEN.' NotFallkh: No! as well the tall And pillared AhVgauv. fall At well Ohio' giant tide Hull backward on its mighty track, At he, Columbia's hoxj and pride, The slandered and the sorely tried, In his triumphant course turn hark. II B ia rot Fallxsj! Seek to bind The chain les. and unbidden wind; Oppose the lorreiil't headlong rourie, And turn nside the whirlwind's force; But deem ye not ihe mighty mind Will cow er before Ihe blast of hate, Or quad at dark and rnuseleia ill For though all else be desolate, Il stoops not from its high estnlo A Marius 'mid the rum tlill. lit: is not FALl.ru! Every breeze That wanders o'er Columbia's bosom, From wild Penobscot's forctl trees, From ocean shore, from inland seas, Or where ihe rich Magnolia's blottom Floats, snow bku, on the sultry wind, Is booming onward on his ear, A homage to hit lofty mind A meed Ihe falling never find, A praise which put riot t only hear. Stak or the West! A million eyea Are turning gladly unto him) The shrine ol old i dotal net Before hit kindling light grows dim ! And men awuke as Irom a dream, Or nivteort dnzzhug lo betray : And bow trcfore hi purer lieain, The earnest of a better day. All Hail! die hour it hastening on When. vainly tried by S lander ' tl.unc, Columbia shall behold her ton Unharmed, wi.lmut a laurel gone, At from the flames of Babylon The angel guarded trial ramel The Slanderer shall le silent (hen, His pell shall leave the mind of men, And higher glory wait ujiou Tlie W fcsTfcKS pATitiuT'a future fame. For Ihe Ohio Stale Journal. MrtHRt. Editors : The follow in? nuestiont were tenl a few davt nro lo ihe Ed.tor of Ihe Sialrsinnii, with a rrnnril that ha would insert and amtwer litem; lot some reason or uther he is sih-nl alxait Ihem ; will you give Ihem an iiiM-rtiou T l. it a religious man's pnlitirul vote m lint rounlry con sidered an endorsement ol character mural as well as political I1 1. Are ell those rcliriom person who voted for Thomas Jefferson, and who now identity themselves with his princi ple under Ihe si vie o " Jt'ller soman Democrat, lo Iw con- anlered as sanctioning Jelterson's infidelity I 3. Are all those reliK on imtsoiis who voted for a certain individual lor llw Yire-Prisideurv, and who hail hun as an blt ttattiman. lo be considered at approving of llw well- known deviations nl his social and private life t . Are or are not piHUiral relaiaiii in this country wnotiy ilistinci from relivivut : nud is nol the atiemiit lo mingle iho two a great error' ol other times and nations again! which our Constitution has lcen rarelully giiantedt o. uuiu uot the requisition lhal religious men snouui vote for those candidate only, who not only arr, bul always have been of i elision, vr oi uncxreptionibly moral character, either deprive iho relirnius ronunuuitv of Ihe elective fran chise almost entirely, or else, drive them io llw selection of uieir own ratHiioatea f ii. SuiitHisa ihe rhurrhes alt combine, am) hereafter put up iheir own eaudiilules, lurfi as ihay rna avprort in ail rupee it ; will not ihe cry of " Church and Slate '' ring from one cud of the land io itie olta-rr 7. Of Iwoeiilt, such ui llw prescnlaiion by tlw great political pat lie ol two caw folates, neiiher ol whom hnt in all resjierls, hi unqnalitiid approval, conscientiously seeking what he beieret lo be I lie Ih.-sI iuleresli ul his country, which will a wie aud good man rltoosv f U, V ill those political friends with whom yon tvmpalhiie, and many uf wliotn are worthy of the Inglicit esteem, here-alter ak our votes for none Ihii men uf religious, or tiruys mnexieptionaldu moral rhnrarler f If Is tl nol trespiissmg on religious men's rights, to attempt to diriaie lo ihem, who they shall vole Inr, lo iwrform for them political foiielious is il nol ihe selling up of a political " in- sei recy of lh- ballot-box ; and whal du you call that spirit which assails a class of luruou poiiiriacrKinls, when iub-lic sentiment deprives Ihem of the poor privilege of dettnd-ine themselves T I'liese were tent tn the Statesman oiw more il may be well to add: 10. la il consilient with the freedom of our institution!, and ihe Mirny of our election to say, '' If vou vote my way, or refuse from voting I'll attend your rhuirh, and if you don't I won't V and would not a e a, accepting such a bribe, or being overawed by such a threat, cover himself with shame, aye, nud everlasting contempt T " AMICUS. The ftpoila. It will be an amusing scene to wittiest Ihe division of Ihe i noils of victory. Htnonir the several divisions ol the grand ar my of Lncofocoism. 'I Iw Van lluren, the Cass, ihe Burhan- aid the rvler cohorts, will earh etix'Cl to Iw remembered in ihe distribution, nud no doubt w ill all get something. The 1 anil men und tlw free l raiie men witi expect lo iw iiuty represented, and plea-anl will be the meeting of ihese null- iMlean interests, in the l-almiet nl Pic newly elected heatt ot roirressive limorrarv. I iw lexan noeruiaior. Willi ooih iKM-kets sniffed lull of bond ami grnnlt, will Iw there, eager to consummate the rrnnd irheinc of Aiinexniion and lo com mence thu purchase and driving of slaves into ihe laud of promise; and cheek hy jowl with mm, Will Po Ihe Atwilitionist, who has lain red ellh ienlly with him in H e turmoil of the contest for Polk and Texas. Cai.iiovn and Bihnky have equal claim upon the gracious patronage of the President elect; ard when the bland Mr. Pot. a thai) introduce them to each other, and joining Iheir hands, rerom mended ihem In walk in peace hereattcr. nt nreinren iu a common cause, ine iiropn-ecy will lie fulfilled, w hich said, "The hon and ihe lamb shall he down together, nnd a little child shall lend Ihem." There it a conirideuce of position and purpn e between these npoatles of disunion in the Sooth and North, which points them mil as tuilnlile nines; aim we nope mat tne iraternity whirl) has been eilahli-hcd by their joint efforts for llw election of poi.K.tiie Extension of Slavery, and ihe establishment of Free Trade, will Iw perpetual I want iful in their lives, in iheir death Uiey should nol be divided, Cirt. Atlas, I English, P roach nad Atnericna Mercantile ITInrtae. An intereatinp; pamplilct has iuat nnpoarcd in England from the pen of Mr. llnyley, (Surveyor to Lloyd's, relative lo the mercantile marine of Great Britain, the United State a, and France. These statements, compiled from official records, may be relied on. A summary of the most striking facts in the pamphlet is annexed: The totnl number ot British vessels built and mpiHtered in Europe and the colonies, in ISO?, was ,H1, ineaaunner according1 to the then mode IJ7, 500 tons. In 1812, the number was 1,481 shins of y(J7,ti00 tons. In 18011, (there is no return for 1802,) tho t ol.nl number of vessels belonging to the Britinh empire was a0,8ir2, the tonnage 2,l()7,8fjy ; in 181 tho aliips were 110,185, with 3, filit,H50 tons. 1 he ratio ot increaie tn America is much greater lhan this; but the returns specify the tonnnge only. t he amount in I7JH was 48,77 tons, which in 18.J4 had grown to 1,758,907 tons. In 1821, the total tonnage of British vessels entered in American ports was 7fj,lHXJ tons ; this had increased in 18.(4 to V40, 700 tons; the American tonnnge havinrr also risen from 71,8()0 in the flrst period to W1.1W tons in the Inst The carrying trade between France and tho United States is now lost tn England, which in IH-.il had 37,300 tons in that traffic : in the following year it decreased to 24,400 tons and has since virtually ceased. The French tonnage, in the American trade was 4,700 in 1821 and rose until J KM, when it reachod 35,100 ; but during the aame period, the American, roae from lti,i200 to 172,000 tons. The total tonnage boloniring to France was 004,100 tons in 18j, and in mn only ul7,10U, though the number of smaller veaacls had increased. In 1827, the ships were 14,;i2; in lft&i they had risen to irhvxit. 1 he returns no not extend later. Losses at Sea. -Putting aside sliiiw condemned. captured, and broken up, the vessels lost in the Inst live years is aa billows: In lHW. In 1H40. In 1841. In 1812. In 1813. 1148 1083 1053 1085 1321 Among which, two modes of destruction fix attention, from the notion of carelessness lhat attaches to the loss : Rundown 33 50 4H 35 45 liurnt 18 24 15 24 23 Missing 111 57 5G 5! I 80 The proportion of losses between British and foreign vessels is Itriiish !H1 804 750 608 970 Furoign ! 321 W7 W 440 Tho particulars relating to the crews are solely for the year 1813; and they give the crews saved of 1,011 vessels, of 157 part saved, and of 144 all lust. Steam Marine or Great Britain. The increase in tho private steam marine during the Inst twenty-five years has been prodigious. In 1814, there was one steamer of GO tons in the United Kingdom, and lhat belonged to Scotland. Next year, Great Britain had eight steamers three English, five Scutch. In 1810V wa had twelve England five, Scotland seven. In 1817, Ireland made a beginning with one, and the total of (lie United Kingdom was four teen. In 1818, the Southern Saxon shut ahead having got ten steamers, Scotland eight, Ireland still sticking at one. The proportions of last year are 010 for England, 128 for Scotland and 81 fur Ireland, Hasorll flaMelnrliiat. It would seem from the following, and similar paragraphs, lo be found in tne eastern papers, that dm worth of Hussell's Planetarium, begins to be under' ood and that ihe genius and skill of the inventor are, in some measure, appreciated, now that the fruits of his labors are lost to Ihe couulry, Wa are not without hope thai a sufficient inducement will Iw pr-sealed lo vur fellow cititen, Mr. Kutsell, lo justify the erection of another Planetarium Russell's Planetarium. Our renders are aware that thin magnificent structure lias been recently destroyed by rire at the burning of the Providence the atre, i tie loss in dollars has been estimated at ten thousand, but that is a poor wny indeed to calculate the loss which elementary astronomy has suffered by iu uesintcuon. l ne inventor and constructor ot the planetarium devoted many years of studious thought and almost incessant labor to itt production. Thou sands of dollars were expended upon it, and at least the patient and perserving experimenter was rewarded by a complete, and so far as mechanical ingenuity could do it, in the present stale of astronomical science, a perfect model of the solar system, showing with exactness and beautiful precision, the revolu tions of the d liferent planetary bodies around tho sun, their diurnal motion, the motion of the satellites or moons, &c. Sic, The operation of the machinery was beautiful, and conveyed at one glance a more correct idoa of our system than whole days of pa tient study. Ihe planetarium was a triumph of American ge nius and American industry. It stood alone a proud and noble contribution to the science of astronomy. it belonged to America, and should have been deposited, as an enduring monument to its inventor and the land he had honored, in some public depository under the ownership of government But it was suffered to go almost a begging, lit Europe its merits were known, and it was sought for. A good price was offered fur it (here, and the proprietors were determined, even at some sacrifice of time and money, lo give the people of this country an opportunity to behold this grea creation of one of their own countrymen before it should be taken from tho land. And in this laudable and praiseworthy work they were engaged when the destroying element burst upon them and the planetarium is a tiling that was. Additional attractions were used by the proprietors in their exhibition of the planetarium, tending-to illustrate it The grand panorama, or moving telescopic view of the heavens, covering a snace of upwards of 5000 square lect of canvass, and repre senting upwards of two hundred thousand distinct objects ; tho proper motion and position of our earth aud moon, with the other planetary bodies in the stellar universe; exact appearances of several of the most celebrated comets ; immense clusters of re mark utile nebula-, die. &c. This, with other apparatus of a similar nature, comprising tlie most brilliant and splendid diagrams, of the sular system and sidereal heavens, were totally consumed by fire, leaving Ihe enterprising proprietors destitute of tho means of prosecuting tlair valuable and instructive labors. Boston VoL In C'bnrnrlrr. I On Friday niirht last, lite elite of tlw loco parly in thit place, headed by the wouht-bc-govertMir, Tod, who wa billowed bv lfobbtu, the fiddler on the occasion, paraded our streets dnriiis; the whole nit;hl, (wilh the exception ot Ihe lime speiil iu pouring tiuwn "poke-juice, j nootuig, niiiioomg, niss-ing ami groaning, in addition to the music by Ifohhin. A spectator might, w iihout any extraoriiinary effort, have imag med thai " the spirit of ihe dam'd" had escaped from tlie nether regions to visit once more ihis earth, "making Ihr night hideout wilh iheir yells." Our quiet village was never More, we venture lo tay, visited by lurh a disgraceful scene of drunk rnness and rowdyism. flnsKV Will not such conduct more closely identify Mr. Tod with the church, the more eseeinlly as il brought him inlo ihe company of ihe very pious othrial, who has taken il upon hutiM'll io testify a lo llw orthodoxy of Air. Tod's r. h-giuu f Trumbull t'hronitte. IlKitnr Cur. Neil in Washington and Franklin, ihe honest historian will transmit him lu future generations, as ihe Patriot who for thirl v sears and more, hail ever Iseen, in crcry emergency, the most prompt lo lly tn ihe rescue of his couinrv, the most whole-souled in his devotion to her several interest lite most successful ta hi clloru to serve and to save her. And what hat betn hit reward t Countrymen! F.ven many of yon who hnve atsiied in the dee I of humor-tihVaiion and rejection, now lhal ihr dent is done and cannot Iw recalled HAN you think of il without shame and remorse I Ifo you not blush at having been areeory to an act so ungenerous lo n fffeat Patriot, and so unjust lo your rounlry 1 Richmond M Viif- A UniTLD fiTAIKS Hr.SATOR ClULI.ESJOKD AT THE Polls. At Ihr Presidential election, in 8l. Louis, some person challenged Senator ilenlnn's vole, on the ground lhal he was nut a rinxcn of the Slate, He was ronsnptently obliged in swear lhal he considered St. Lotus as his place nfresifleiicet Iw was then permitted lo vole. It is something sinxular to see the represent alive of a Stale compelled lo swear w helher he n retideul ol the State or not. Jl aether Horrra from Mr. Acta ana. Mr. Jon (irtarf A pans made another long speech lo m constituent, nt north itnugwaler, Ala.,on eiteesiiay llw Mill. Wc hnve sern but a small portion of ll in tlie Eastern pa tiers. Mr. Aoami snvs : Mr Jackson has rescinded to my summons bill be hat not put himself upon the country, either with regard to hit charge against me, or to my charge against hun. He blusters, but ho retreat. He pours forth invectives, bul he ftmclwa. Ha is entirely mistaken, when he says lhat my add re in llw youiir men of Hoston is a labored altrinnl lo discredit llw testimony of Mr. Krving. I know not whal Ihe testimony of Mr. hrving is. 1 Iw hero's el ceterat, Itrowa and logeraoll, have Inken special rare lo keep out of my reach. I lie jHir-(Kite of my address lo ihe young men ul Ihniott, wa to dn credit the testimony nol of Mr. Krvina. bul of the hero him- tell i anil the first of my witnesses was Aaron Viiil Hrown.hit rorrrsiHHident anil ouhlmher. Ilia note unon ihe main alle gation against me, of iho hero's teller proved il lalse, ami lhal ItniMn knew it lo tw talte and now tlie hem formally gives ii up. Hear him "I Iwlievcil (ays he irom uw ins- closure made to me of the transaction ol 1UP, that Mr. Atlamt surrendered the interest of die United Stales when he look the Nahiiic river as a lmmdnrv between us anil Spain, when he might have gone to the Colorado, if not to llw Kto del None." See how the hero skulk from hit rhirgr, anil lakrs refuge in the Colorado, and Ihe if Nofs uf hi el rt lerat, Ingersoll aud llrnwn. "Such (Iw my ag-iin) wat the natural inter-nice, from the tncls timed by Mr. F.ivinf t ami there it nothing in Uw arruunt now given, lo alter this impression." Hut stuh i Mil the iiilereuce I nun the tarts staled by Mr F.rviug, in the hero's charge against our got eminent. Look buck io ihe charge. There is uo t 'oloratfo, there are no if aWt there. Tlie charge was direrl bohl oinuliHed, Mr. Krving had negiiiiaird a irvnly Iw wrote home for power lo sign ib Spam stood ready to y eld llw Km ti ramie Inr ihe boundary, and our government gave tip lite whole territory Itiween l fie two rivers, having llw opnon tn retain it. And now llw inference from Mr, F.rviug disclosures, ia, not lluil he made a treaty, bul lhat if we hail h.iggled longer, wr might have got tlw Colorado, if n4 the It in del ISonul In tint coutrovci of the hero with himself, whom shall we believe I N in nit lo Your Colore t We adopt and reprint wilh pleasure the following manly setilimeuit Imtn ihe Alexandria ( inset le mt reecl hilly ask very Whig io rend Ihem, Iwfore yielding, even lor a moment, to a Icrbng of despondency. " The indication of lite general determination of the Whigs of the country, to maintain their organisation, as w Il ia defeat as in suecesa, are loo numerous to Iw mistaken, and wo htul the " Union of the Wings." a another prool of the patriotism of llw party. They wdl nover desert their cause or their principles. 'I hey have stood together, shoulder to shoulder, and they have contended nobly lor the best interest aud the best men of the country. In advrrtilj, they have l ha proud contention of knowing lhal they have done all thai men could do, wilh honor and il is no fault of theirs, if adverse results shmild now ensue lo Ihe government and ths people. Year and years hence. Ihe contctl of H U will tw recollected by all good Whig, a iho lime which rriVsf and pmiyrf ihe tint not tm of those who strove for tho elevation ot itenry Clay. Mnml lo oiir rotor THI', NATIONAL FLAG, GALLANT WHIGS! Ul mhen come tnyou. It Is ynur part io stand fast, nnd com nine to do your best for our beloved country." U inthetttr f 'a.) Republican. Mlt iltn Ar. All the LoeoliHMt candidates for Congrats art elected, Tlie delegation in the next llmite will stand: 11 dist. Robert MrCelland, re-el tried. 2d diit. John S. Clnmnan, succeeds L. Lyon. !M dist. James It. 1 1 nut. re-elected. The Legislature will Iw nearly all Loco, elect inr a II. S. Senator for tix years in place of IL. Augustus a. Porter, Whig. Snip'nnw elect! a Whig to the House) the split between ihe Hiruey and anli-llirm-y Loeoloro ha v inr dcfcaird both. though Polk hat A majority in the county. H'eia. Whig titan. Land (Uiritns task Noticr. The Lima Reporter iavs: We observe from Ihe proclamation nf the President lhal the alternate tertioni along the Miami Canal are to be ode red for ale al Upper Sandusky, on the filh ot January next. These lands, as it it probable moil people kiww, Iw within live miles on each side ol the canal, and are alternate lo those see linni granted by Congress lo the Slnte nf Ohio lo aid in const rurt ing taid ranal, Mrtiry of them ha on, or in Ihe vicinity of ths Angl iitr river, and are very valuable puttie are improved, '2,d0 will he tht minimum pi ice. RownrisM a an Profanity.! hi Monday night, a number of boys from Ifover, joined with some Mongmg to our village, led on by a few Polkiles, paraded the streets, yelling ami hooping, a if escaped from a mad house. On pasting the dwrfhng of a highly respectable clergyman, ihey hailod "three groan for ihett ld d prearher." wat then shell ed forth, ami the habitation of the acrurted. could uol have sent forth a mure hideout yell. TWnruirdJ Adrocatt, Total DitrnAViTt. We do not know when or where we have met sirtiger evidener of total depravity, lhan in the following toast, drank by II. II. Robinson, F.ditor ot the Enquirer, al a late " Progressive Democratic " dinner, given to certain Kdiiors in ihis rily. Here il it, read and decide : "Thk Kkntitky Blatk-Lko. He has played hit tail corsf, aud now wails in terror for the lait fmsan." Cut. Oat, St.AUflllTrniita Hoot. The Cincinnati Bulletin of Tuesday says: Thia business commenced in our rily some lime since, ami wr have noticed quite a nutnlwr of wagon loadt al ihe doort of our iiuincrnu Pork Houses. Perhaps 16 or tfU.ntm have Iwen already slaughtered. Prices range from f. io fx.io. as soon as uw weather lumacoHier toe ou- sinesa will increase. It it said that ihe Hon. Htl.Al WmottT. Governor elect of Ihe Stale of New York, will occupy his teat in the U! Slalet Scuate during llw month of Deccmier, He docs not assume htt official dunes as Governor until January. Pork market. Mr. Dakti.kt is again at Ripler. taking in Pork. ny ins nuvcMiscmont, we learn ho wishes to pur chnne 1 '10(H) hogs, lu be delivered at that place. i ms same gentleman paid lor pork, delivered at Ripley last year, thirty-seven thousand dollars. If ii nau not Deen inr tnis sum oi money, it would have been very difficult for tho citizens of this county to have paid their taxes last year. It gnvo great relief to ine people generally, revived rjusinest, and stint' ulated them to further enterprise. it would epiwar that t like sum or bW.OOO. or mnre will be again distributed among thecilixenaof llrown county, Irom tho saino source, tor tho pork ot ine current year. Now, as we understand, tins Pork is purchased for consumption in Massachusetts, with Massachusetts money. All this may fairly be traced to tho Tariff oi itHJ, to the largo increase of workmen, now employed in ihe Kastern States, which increases the demand for Western provisions. Is it not strange, that wo can find men, lots of men, oven those who have received tho benefit of this very money, who do all in their powor to drsiroy this very market? We need not stop tn point out now ii ia aono, mr cvory man wno reiit'cu u u, must know, to repeal the Tariff is to destroy this market, Bro wn Co Examiner. lflr. hildsea Mlllrrisnt. There it truth and force in tlw following, from a letter nf Mr. Child. We commend ihem lo the thoughtful and philosophic reader: I often hear this called a singular delusion ; hut to me it seems hy no means singular. It is the legitimate result of the external theological teaching, which has prevailed, to a great extent, in our churches, ever since our country was colonized by cliris lians. The people have been told, for a series of yenrs, that tho world Would be destroyed by material tire, and that the Messiah would come visibly in the heavens, to reign as king on the earth. It is but one step more, to decide when these events will occur. The Jews, who, in the first advent of a Messiah, expected a powerful prince, to conquer the Uo-tnana aud restore the national glory of Judea, were not more grossly external in their application of the prophecies, than are moat of the theological commentators on the second advent. Yet, unconscious of the limitation of their own vision, they speak with patronizing compassion of the blindness of the Jews. If men applied half as much common sense to their theological investigations, as they do to every other subject, they could not worship a God, who, having filled this world with millions of his children, would liti.il ly consign them all to eternal destruction, except a few who could be induced lo believe in very d i Ilie u It and doubtful explanations nf prophecies, handed down to us through the long lapse of ages. There is, however, a deeper causo for this excitement, than blind theological teaching. Tho old heavens and the old earth are passing away. In other words, the religious sentiment of Christendom is changing; and ot course old theological opinions. wmcn are merely uic garb nt sentiments, are every where falling uff,like tattered and ill-fitting garments. As the church changes, the state inevitably changes, too; and the civil and social condition of man is slowly ascending to a higher plane. i ins is jen, even by those wno deprecate it, and would avert it if they could ; hnd pressing thus on the universal consciousness, its ultimate and most external form is Millcrism. The coming nf a new heaven and a new earth cannot reveal itself to their apprehension through any other medium, than tho onus in which ihey announce it L M. C. Crime aat lu t'oaarsjaraeee. On the 30th September last I hero arrived in Bos ton two persons, hngliahmcrifWhocallcd their names Ellis; the oldest apparently about fifty years of age, tho other, not more than two or three and twenty. They boarded at tlie Pavilion Hotel, passed off as being connected together by relationship, and asso ciated with the gentlemen boarders of the house. It now appears that their real names were Joseph Elder and William Burgess, and that they were fugitives from justice, in England. The younger man, Burgess, was a Clerk iu the Bonk of England, and through his means a number of shares in the capital stock of tho Bnnka, mounting to between forty and fifty thousand dollars, were sold and transferred, the man Elder fraudulently representing himself as the owner of Jie stock, Tlie parties made their escape from Ijondon, and landed from tho steamer from Liverpool at Halifax, and thence travelled through the ('auadns to this city. On Thursday, R. Bond and John Forrester, the former, another Clerk in tho Bank, and the latter, one of the Mansion House Police, arrived in this city, having been on the track of the fugitives for some days. lithe afternoon they arrested Elder at the boarding house in Federal street, and obtained information that Burgees was at NahanL A party of ollicera proceeded to the Hotel, and one of them found the culprit, but by some extraordinary accident, he made his escape from the person who arrested him, and fled. He was heard of from a cottage at Nahnnt, and a boat was yesterday missing from the beach, and the conclusion is, that ho either put out to sea, in the hope of being taken up by a vessel, or that he crossed over to iho main land. Yesterday morning, on opening the cell of Elder, at the Jail, no was found dead, having committed suicide in the night by hanging himself. Wo learn that he had invested his ill-gotten gains in stock and trearury notes, Ihe certificates of which were on his person, when he was arrested, and that these, wjih the money found iu the room of Burgess, at N nli ant, mtko up the sum received by ihem, except about three thousand dollars, which has unquestiona bly been spent. Ilmlon Jltla$ nAor. !. s?oaa1alio of Ohio, The Official vote of the Niate enables us to make a very nearly accurate estimate of the present population of the State, Tho population of the State of Ohio in 1H40 Death in tiik Pulpit. The Rev. Wilson Con ner, a Baptist minister in (ienrgia, fell dead in the pulpit on the fifth Sabbath in June last, after preach ing irom these words "Verily, vnniy i say unio you, the hotiY is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of tho Son of God, and they lhat hear shall live One year ago. thero were more than ninety indi viduals from Virginia holding office under (iovem ment in the District of Columbia, wilh an aggregate annual salary of more lhan 9147,000 while from Maine thore wore not ten. Tho Albany Argus states that the commerce on the Canals of tho Stato. and on the Hudson, has been much greater tins year than in Irl.i. wn the Hth inst there were l5 sail of sloops and schooners at tho wharves, besides the usual number of steam and low boats. Snow. We are informed by a gentleman from New Durham, that there was a fall of snow in that town and vicinity, on Monday last, 4th inst, about two inches in depth. This we believe was the first snow of the season in that region. Do otr Gazette. was 1,M5,0(H The total vote was The ratio of votes to the population was 5 ll-20tht The total vote in 1844 was .ll'JV-MI The same ratio of persons gives l.TI&.tSFi This we aupmaa is just about tho population of Ohio in 1814. This ratio will give about a, 100,000, as Ihe population of Ohio 1850. We think the result will be greater than that. Ohio will then be the second' State in the Union.rtnd it is not impossible that ten years more (lrjtiO) will make il tlie first Cin. Chronicle, StMFt.F. CtrRK for CrousV We find in the Journal of Health the following simple remedy for tins dangerous disease. Those who have panned nights of intense agony at tho bedside of loved children win trcasurn it up aa an invaluahle piece ol information. If a child is taken with croup, instantly apply cold water, ice water if possible, suddenly and freely to the neck and chest, with a sponge. The breathing will almost inatanily be relieved. So soon as possible lot the atmerer drink as much as it cant then wipe it dry, cover it up warm, and soon a ouiet slumber will relieve the parent's anxiety and lead tho heart in thankfulness to the powor which has given to tho pure gushing fountain inch medical qualities. JLnlfsl from Afrirn. The lost arrival from Africa brings favorable ac counts of the condition and pros pec la of the Amer ican colonies on we const. The Methodist Epincupal Church has three nlacea of worship among the colonists ot Cape Paltnas. The Rev. John Seys, in an interesting account of his tour round tlie various stations, thus describes them : One at Harper, a little town on Ihe summit of iho cape where the Government House is located, one at Mount Emory, about a mile in the interior, and a substantial little church at Tubman town, three miles farther still. The people at Harper can easily attend at Mount Emory, but it is somewhat inconvenient for a!l tho Tubman members and friends to do so, so I promised them a quarterly meeting in their own neighborhood, and accordingly all went uut to Tubtnun aud enjoved a delightful season. They are a plain, unrefined, but honest and spiritual people, I used to love much to go out to that part of the circuit and preach Ihe word ot life to them." Mr. Seys accepted an invitation to visit the mission station at Cavalla, under the care of the Rev. John Payne, ot the Protestant Episcopal mission. Hu thus speaks of it: Mr. Payne's mission establishment is a perfect model for others. I have never seen greater order. decorum and regularity any where. There are two schools, one for boys, and the other for girls. Theco are an natives with but one or two exceptions. Mrs. rayne has the enure charge ot tho female deportment, which is in a separate building altogether from the boys' school. At the time of my visit they had twenty-eight boys and seventeen girls. Tho regular complement of girls is twenty, but duiing Mr. and Mrs. Payne's temporary absence last year at the time of tho difficulties with the natives, ono of these I in Jo girls was accidentally drowned, one hnd gune to visit her parents, and another was sick. The parent of these children live mostly in tlie immediata neighborhood, and keep up a constant intercourse wim them. I did nut visit the girl's school, but with the bnv't I was perfectly delighted. The exorcises in reading, isiQie History, geogrsfiy, the elements of natural fhilosophy, arithmetic, and writing astonished nie. was invited lo preach to Mr. Payne's native congregation in his neat bamboo chapel situated in tho midst of a large town near tlie mission premises. The natives turned out well and behaved soberly and decorously. Mr. Seys describes the colonists at Cape Pal mas as an industrious and moral people, and says that thev have a very efficient police. The editor of the Liberty Herald thus speaks of ine ue pan tiro irom Monrovia ol the U. 0. ship Macedonian, Commodore Perry : "We feel emotions of sadness al the departute of this vessel. The deep interest in our welfare at all limes manifested by (he Commodore, by Captain Mayo, and the gallant officers of this sthp their readiness to lend us on eveiy occasion all the aid of their influence, and ihe dignified and gentlemanly carriage of all with whom it has been our pleasure tn lorin an acquaintance have begotten an attachment not frequently conceived by casual and briof intercourse. The people of the United States need entertain no apprehension of the high place they occupy in the estimation of the world while they tend such representatives abroad. May the hand that Inlh been around them a shield f rom the pestileoco of Africa, conduct them safely to tlie bosom of their tnmiues. The Africa's Luminary of September 4th aavs the colony of Liberia is in a prosperous condition. The colonists are about appropriating $150 to the re- uumpuon oi nsitvo Children Irom slavery. From Uw IVrrytburgh Miami of Lake Erie." MuanRR. Information havinff been receivpit hm said to have emanated from an individual in the New-York Stale Prison, that some time early in April last, a murder was committed near this place, our Citixens turned out and after two nr ihrf dt-.t search, a body was found in the woods, about a mil irom me roan, partially buried in a root hole. Near the body was also found a black fur hat with a ball hole through it The murdered person had on acot-ton shirt with a linen collar and bosom, but so decayed as lo leave no other mark if any was ever upon it There was also a black silk cravat around tlie neck. The body although much decayed, showed evident signs of violence ; and tnkun in connection with the clothes found in the river, an account of which was published some weeks since, leaves no doubt that a most fnul and brutal murder has been perpetrated i but nothing has yet transpired to lead to tho discovery of who the murdered person was, ui miL'rv iruui. Rumor says that there were tiro rwrtnns nmrdisnxl at the same lime tint they were travelling West with a horse and buggy and that tliev cam faun Cleveland or beyond. tt? We hope the Press generally, will notice the above, as it may lead to a discovery of who the murdered person or persons were. DisTarsainoOcciiaRr.irt. The Clermont Cotir. ler says an explosion look place in the Distillery of Mr. Samuel Per.n, in Miami township, on Wednesday last, by which a Mr. Bttrgor, was almost instant ly Kitieii, anu a ir. uanden, so severely injured that tt is thought he cinnot survive. The vessel that exploded was a large cask in which ihe boor w. hnil. ed by turning steam into it Tho cause of the accident we believe is unknown and unaccountable explosions of tho kind being of very rare occurrence, Mr. Darius Porin and another gentleman wore within a fuw feet of tho vessel when it exploded, anil uimipn pnmirniiu oy mo snocK,uiey lurlunaluly sustained but little injury, Suicina. Mr. M. II Jameson, of Orange, Richland county, committed suicide on Monday morning last, by shooting himself throutrh the brain with . ri. flu 11. committed tlie ,ct in tlie barroom of Mr. T. Smiirr', hotel, while hi, fellow boirdera were et breekfmt. Wo le.rn he left letter which limy vive Home cluo lo the iim Uo i jruung uuui of good Handing in community.

WEEKLY 0 0 JO RNAL VOLUME XXXV. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1844. NUMBER 16. PUBLISHED EVEKV WKDNKHDAY MOIININU, BY CHARLES SCOTT & CO. Office coruor of Highand Town ButUei' Building. TERMS: Two Dollar 1 rt.it ansim, which mud Invariably I paid in advance, free of postage, or of per carnage, to Agitata or Collectors. ... r Tlw Journal is also published dmly dunn tli nmn or the Legislature ; and thrice a week the remainder of the year for J5 end three limes a week, yearly, for THURSDAY EVENING, Novempbh 21, 1844. KI.K4 Tln KKW, Old ITlnMitchiiMtlie Forever! Tlw six towns mitttd by the exprosses of ihe Alias are in. Their atxreftale vole show a locofoco majority of 17. Bo the good old Hay Stale holdi fail to her nohh majority of nrry Jileen tkouiami for Clay over IMk! Several town have elefted Whig Representatives, not before mentioned. The Wide of Representative standi Whig l9j Loco A3. A HhmM from Ihe Grwa Moaatnlaa ! ITImmb-chsisell m Ira oat eclliwsl! We have received, through the lloitiin Alia, return from 145 lowm of Vermont. They show Ihe following glorious mull: Clay over nil .56 Hlade had in tntno lowm in August W2 Clay's net gain 4-1 At ihi rale Clay' majority over polk will not be leu than TWELVE or FOURTEEN THOUSAND in tlw Stale! Who would not fed proud lo be called a Vermont or Masso- chute l is Whig? NttW H AMPBHiBl. Full return! from this Stale make Polk's majority over Clay altoni H.OOOj over Clay and Bimry 6,114. North Carolina. Returns are in from all the cointint of Norih Carolina but one, ( Hyde.) Olny's majority now ii 4,000, which will bo furthur inercascd by Hyde aboul 300. PmnaYLVAMA ajjirlat. Polks mnjorily 6,333. This docs mil look much like the 30,000 or 40,000 thai Jackson use in receive From TkKMKMBK we have nothing laler than was given In our last. Louisiana. We have return from 27 prer inris of this Stale, Kivinir a Whig majority of about 700. There ure IJ more lo hrar from. The Whig papers do nol give up ihe Stale, hut il items probable (hat il hat gone for Polk by a very small majority, lest limn the illegal vote polled iu Plaque mine. The daring fraud perpetrated in thia precinct, hat cautcd in extraordinary degree of excitement in the Stale. Measures have beeu set on loot lo expose the whole trnntne-tion and, if possible, lo bring lo condign punishment Ihe scoundrels who have been engaged in it. Il excecas in nom- tifii anil hardihood any fraud ever In-fore perpetrated by a party that have winked at the giusscsl iniquity nil and again, llrary Cinr anal J. K. Folk. Who thinks lest of Henry Clay, now that the hope of fee ing him President of the United State, it loatf U'bobelievea him lew a Statesman, less an Oralor, lens a 1'atrioiT Ii value his patt tervices lest and f. rls let pride in having tup-poried itit-tl a manT Who would cherish a token from him leu, becnuc he ha been defeated iu the eonlt t for the l're idenry that hai jutlclotcdl Nolonc notorte! Hi praise are tlill on the. lotifnitii of million. His fair countrywomen fuel and deplore hi defeat a dreply an it is possible for their fathers, huthaiidl and brother lo feel it A bevy of beautiful girl in our cily were affected even lo tear, w hen the intelligence that all wa lol, wai conveyed lo their eari. The recollection of havinff contributed lo sentre him Ihe vole of thi Stale, if cherished by every Whig of Ohio at something thai he can tell with pride lo hit latest day. Though defeated, he l audi yel in ihe estimation of his friends, ihe greaietl man of the day. He it ttill Harry Clay, and there it but one. The boy ting iheir song m honor of hi name and fame at heartily at il he were now Presidrnt elect. At tbousnnd uf Hre-aidet the little one ehirp at aweelly at cvrr, "(lid bleti Harry Clay," "The noble Harry Clay." The little memento of the campaign Clay Portrait, Clay Dreaitpint, etc., are treasured at carefully and purr hated a eagerly a ever. A thmitand thing are daily transpiring and developing (hcniteke, showing that he has a hold on the affections of the people of this country, that no man hat secured before, tinre the day of Washington. Now turn we to hit nptmnnnl, James K. Polk of Tennessee. Who thinks mure of him tinre his election lhan he did before? Who hebeve lhat he hat entitled himtelf lo the dii-tiurlioa by any art of hit hle.orallof them combined! Who ean point to the evidence of hii filiiei, the patriotic love of country, the dittiaguithcd services that render turn wortliy ol the eialled station exalted still, though filled by a traitor whote name will gi down In pnie rily eomterted with all that ia despicable and vile. He is still James K. Polk, of Ten-neuee, the blind adherent of Andrew Jarknon, the invrrnlc partisan, Greaiuets hat been ihruil iiMn hnnj ami-high at is hit elevalioa be will he a pigmy tlill. His noniinnlion wat brought about by a shameful disregard of party inlrurikui, and hit election hit been consummated by the foulett meant. Thongh Preiiileul, he ha not a hundred devoted friend in the country, and unless he Mies the expcciniinnt of those who nom iiAlcd him, he will sink into obscurity at toon a hit term has closed, ramemlered only at Ihe forlorn hope of a distracted caucus. Who would not rather be Henry Clay, the private cilnea, than James K. Polk, the President of the United Statett Hirll tf the Ohio Whig Pre. There is something peculiarly refreshing in the spirit of the Whig Preit of Ohio at ihe present time. Deeply mortified al the result in some parts of the Union, our gnllnnl corps of editors undoubtedly are yet iiittead uf criminating and recriminating instead ol easting rrflueliout on their lets fortunate but equally deserving brethren and throwing down their arms In despair, they willingly, gladly bear letlnnoiiy 10 ine energy and fidelity of every section of the great Whig army, and breathe an unalterable determination to stand liy tnitr, principles and to wage unceasing warlare against those whose principlei are oVtlrurtivo of the prosperity and peace of the country. They are fontcioui of having achieved a noble victory in Ohio, and are fully sensible ol the importance of making a right use of that victory. They feel thut the intelligence and patriotism of the land it with them, and that toon-eror later those who have secured a triumph in ihe general contctl, by falsehood, blander and fraud, must bo hurled from power by an awakened sense of justice and right in the minds of ihe great matt of the people. Alive to the necessity of prudent councils, a conciliatory spirit, wisdom and firmness in the Whig ranks of the Stale, they are determined lo merge every selfish cuntidcrntion in & general effort to strengthen their organization, disicmmate light among Imt people, se cure the adoption of correct measures for the Slate, and render permaueiil the Whig ascendancy iu this great and grow- nig Commonwealth. Such a spirit must accomplish nil we need, all we hope for. Let it be cherished, and let our Slate Legislators bring to their important labors the same disposition, nud all will 1)0 well. From the many paragraphs on our table, from mir ex changes, we cau only find room for the following, loday : From the Springfield Republic. The Whig pmty, though "cast down," is far from being destroyed. It hot known darker hour thmi lh present, even wiilitu the brief limn of our participation in it triumph and deleult. And it never was stronger than it in to-day. It never gave more voles lltnu il ha juM done. Its prinriplct never purer, not even in the. simple of '1ft. Those principles, we are firmly convinced, will ) el tie in the ascendiint and raise the Wing parly into power, Just as surely as the ( iovcrnnienl stands lor ihe Government was originally built upon ihein. Lei no one, then, ilesiMiml. l.el us watcii the conquerors closely, nud hold them lo ihe pomiions as timed by them dur ing Hie eaiivnn. e must not ureim our lines we must inn slack our organisation we must not tessrn our vigilance, If tint Whigt are quiet, firm, wise, and fnitbliil to their principles, they will yet enjoy iiituiy proud victoriet, which shall bless ilie land with prosperity. Most especially should the Whigs of Ohio stand fast and firm. Their rolnmn i unbroken. Their division ot the great Whig nrmy is triumphant. We hold the Government ol our Moved Stule in our hands. Let us nol lighlly risk the rich possession. Let no temporary excitement drive ut into a position whote we could not maintain ourselves mid preserve our MiHer, and whence wo should find loo late thai mo could not withdraw. Whig lo be a Whig to feel like a Whig lo fight like a Whig is glory enough lor nuy Auierirnn citizen. Lei us stand fast llien, here in Whig Ohio, by Whig principles, mid preserve uur organization unimpaired. From the Dayton Transcript. Now and then we hear from the lips of some more timid Whigs, l lie doh'I'ul excldinalioii. "let ns dishand," Disband! I Join utter the word. Unhand! The vtordMtund lmrhly. We don'i like lo hear il. Burnish up your armor, ye gnlliinl Whigt ol Ohio, and march agiiin lo ihe rontbcl. Although a cnlanuloot defeat, (in Ihe din lul evil of which you will have lo fdinru, so far as ualioual ntl'air are concerned,) has overln ken your brethren in oilier Smtes, yel al home you stand lonli far advanced on the v;int;ige ground of victory and triumph. Here nl home, all is right nil i well. You enjoy ihe proud sati-l'action of having done your duly, and uu ly have you sustained oiir principl. s. And ol those principle you may alo lc proud. They are the political tall, whirh alone can save this country from utter ruin. Then maim m n (hem, and iniiiiilain them inviolate. Keep up your nrumiizniion, and never lor a moment turn a-side alter ihis or thai iim. Il i your duly to make constant war upon LocoforoiNin , and reae nol the contest till the loul monsler Iw extirpated irom the laud, and truth shall reign in-uniplinul. True, lor four yenrs lo come, you will have to live under a President, given you lor the first time by foreign in-fhinice and foreign voles, b'lt know you not, lhal thai Itrtii-h President and his iiarasite in t'liinrresM, ae rendered iiower- less, as to any yntitirt niischief liiey might do, by a Wing Senate Though Texas may be annexed, yel the odious Sub-Treasury law can never lie pxs-d, nor enn the W'h'g Tariff of lli 'l l rrjiettkd. That they date not do dare nol :eiiipt. The Whir MM v. then, is the great ronservalive party of the Union. Let il maintain it inieitriiv.aiid ere lone, the honest ol all parties will come to it aid and save the Union from H'struction. II me i.oroiocm auu ineir lureign nines ran vc under ihe reign ol King Hickory ihe second, surely Ihe Whim can. And thoiurh t uc wheels ofbosincss may Hon, or he rendered nugatory, by the weighty clogs of Lucoliieuisin, yet we have a country and a government worth saving. W'higt of Monljiomcrv county Hit Ohio of the Union, let ut save it, ami enjoy iho proutl alifnriion of transmit ling :t in ill H primiiive piiniy iu inure generations. Your name, WIIK1, it a tower ol strength. Il enllsup the spirit of nor Washington our Madi suns our Adamses ami an ine nosi ol our iievoiuiiouary sire. uen lorsnae not iho name. It associations are glorious and hearl-ttirring. Deleat nh il, is more desirable than v trior v, under the black banner of Texas and l.ocoformsm, although tinseled over with the false and hpocriliral draiicry of modern Democracy, From Ihe Snndu.ky Clarion. Here in Ohio, ihe party slaudt uonu hieh gmund, and pos sesses the means if doing much for ihe(niblic welfare. This, alone, is a snnVicnt tiiducemenl lo keep op a thorough and 'Inrii'iil orgam Kaiion. Iiulepeiiilenl ot ihe union, we Have a oinplele roveruitieiil, and il is eomnleu-lv in our control. We hope it will lientiniiuistereil wisely, without liar or favor. and thil it will le always ready to aid lint Union when it shall demand its assistance, or he in a condition lube benefited by its exertion. (School nks. We have received from Iho publishers, Messrs. Grigg ol Elliot, Philadelphia, six numbers of ltuscil KNHERQKn't series of Books on the subject of Natural History, embracing those mutt generally adopted as text books by touchers. The introduction of this scries of books into our Schools is a matter of iutrresl, and we are glad lo know ihul our enterprising publishers and liook-tellers in Ihis cily, Mettrt. Whiting Huntington, and J. II. RUrtf, arc prepared to antwer any orders for Ilium. The scries consists of eight numbers, embracing the following subjects, with engravings illustrative of ihe lexi, each complete in itself, lo wit: I. Elements of PttTiini.onT and A. H atom v. 1 Elements of Mahmaluoy Natural History of Quadrupeds.3. Elemnls of OnsiTimi.ocr Natural History of Biidt. 4. Elements of H:RrKTi)t.iMiY and km iiTui.uuv Natural History of Reptiles and Fnhet. 6. Element of CuSCHul.iiG v Natural History of Shvlls and Mollusea. G. Elements of EktomuMjuy Natural History oflntecls, iVc, 7. Elciiienlt of Botakt Nntural History of Plants. 8. Eli' men t of Ukoluuy Natural History of the Earth's structure. The tettimoninla of teachers and scientific men to the value ol these icvernl works, am numerous. A Kr.w work on Baptism, bearing iho following title, has just been publiilicd by Mr. Derby of Cincinnati, and Ap- plrlon.of N. York : "Crilicnl Exposition of Ilnplism; embracing the Mosaic Baptisms) Jewish Traditionary Baplitini; John' Baptism, and Christian Baptism clearly establishing the Scriptural authority of Affusion and Sprinkling, nnd of Infant Ilnplism." By LKltesTKn A. Sawykk. A. M., President of Central College, Ohio. We have been thus particular in transcribing the title page of this work, owing lo our inability to give it a critical examination and extended notice. The tille explains Ilie character and design of the work. How well ihe author hat succeeded, in the 200 pages of (hit little volume, in sustaining and establishing the positions ho hnt assumed, we leave tho reader to decide. This much we may say. The work is well got up iu good muslin binding and on good paper. The style of the author it eminently attractive and impressive. He has aimed lo be practical, and has so arranged nnd systematized ihe matter of lit work, ns lo impress nud enforco nil he advances. He divides and sub-divides his subject and simplifies as far as is consistent with Ihe comprehensive design lie hat in view. Ho goet over Iho whole ftidd of tins interesting branch of I Polemic Theology, and en trenches hi position with all the weigh! of authority nnd force of argument of which it is susceptible. Tho standing and acknowledged ability of Mr. Sawyer will secure for his book an extensive circulation ; and itt moderate price will place it within ihe reach of all. Il ia for sate al the Book stores of thin citv. A PnrnarBtih Hint Merita ut Rxplnnnlloti! Vole of thu Five Point Districts (New Yo-kf (:ld of Sinh Ward) Clay, ltl.3; Polk, C68 NEAHLY FOUR ro ONE." ', re for lhr oor" sir The laboring men of the land must leel under many obliga tions to the editor of the Slates man who, after doing his best lo prnslrale their Inhor, and bring litem down lo ihe European standard, now turns round nnd exult over iheir calamities. ID" The Statesman says lhal Mr. Cby pledged himself to the principles of Ihe Nnlivo American. The assertion is without Ihe least foundation tn truth cut out of w hole cloth. 'anuot iho Statesman py some regard for truth, now the election i over t (CT'l'lio Statesman asks" What now becomes of the Whig (icrmmi paper of Cincinnati 1" It will continue lo iftttle for Whig principles and expose Iho inconsistencies, fraud nnd iniquities of Locnfoeoisia And right good aer- icewill it do loo, as the Statesman will hud. Tho Prise Raaarr, The Harrison Co. Kepuhltcnn " and the Morgan Co. Mndepciidenl," wish lo e informed through the Journal, as lo Ihe disposition of the Pnte Banner proffered by the State Central Commuter to Ihe Whigt of that County that should give " the greatest increase per centum vole for the Hectors who may cast iheir votes for Henry Clay, over the votes rail for the rlectort of (Jen. Harrison in WW." lite Slate Committer will probably decide the m niter in a day or two. The gallant W higs of Harritou and 31 organ have en titled themselves lo lasting honor, but at we have not inslilu- led a comparison, we cannot say which it ihe ' Banner Coun ty " of Ohio. The prise will lie awarded to llmto who have won it un Iho day ihe Preiidentiol Electors cast their volet for Pretideul of the United Stales, iu this city. Tho Trloaaph of Ike Press Trnslera. We give below, paragraiih from the Charleston Mercury ( Mr. Calhouu's southern organ,) of the lth inst , tail forth, il will be sera, after the result of the election bad been ascertained. How will the announcement he received in poor, swindled Pemisylvamaf How would the declaration lhal the triumph of Mr. polk is a Fiuk Thahc triumph, look even in the columns of a New York or Ohio paper! What would have been ihe effect of such an intimation thrown out before election in any ol the middle or northern Stalest What would have been said by the thousands of latwtrrr of Pennsylvania, had a letter been produced from Mr. Polk announcing his de termination in case of election, to gn for a rvpen pftht 7.i-rif, Frtt traitt, fft t l.et those wlio were told before election, lhal Mr. Polk was as friendly u I'tvirrlitm as Mr. Clay, answer these questions, in view of ihe following: The mails of vrsterdny removed all doubt. Tlie Empire State ha given Polk and Dallas a majority of thousands hid, wuh the exception of Norlh Carolina, which loo show a decided turning hark to I lie right, the whole South is muled for 'Fm Tratit, Low Duties. No Debt, rVpainlioii from Bauks. Economy, Ucirt'iichmcui, ami a strict adherence to ilie loiisiiiution.' tL7The Daily and Weekly Wmu Stathmtid, an able an untiring ndvornteof Whig principles, hitherto piil lislieil at Washington City, hat been discontinued. We regret this. 'be Standard has not received ihul patronage il deserved, and we are not without hope that il will lie teedily revived. '1 he following are the closing paragraph ol Ihe valedictory uf ihe editor : Should ii Im fiHtitd advisable, at a future and not remnle ilay, after the Whig from various parts of the country have had lime to interchange, sentiments, lo resume the publication of ihi paper, and iirner exertion are male lo give it a pa- innings- tutu "in jip mc iiiMirriuiiiK, wc nui mrri urn call wuh pleasure. N'ollung is more congenial lo our feelings, e conies, irian lo give constaNf, uMinnr, ami as inr as m us lies, wtH-ttimeii baitle lo ltcofoeoitm. Sixincr or later it stiff nisx dutrn; and although we are not able to foth'W ftp the cA'ite, wr are detvrminiil lo be in ut lite nV'iJA, lo partake of the heartfelt njoicing which will then make lira whole heaven )olul, and a redeemed, regenerated, nnd dMCii-thralled " people glad! I n our hreinr'ii ol ine to press, we tewier our sine' re nnd hearlfelt thanks. We hoiie and trust lhat earh and all :if them may continue to uphold the Gimp oi.n causk, and that they will press forward with aval, niaiuiiuiiuig the just principles of Ilie Wmu taktv. UTT There is a good deal of point and no little truth in the following from ihe St. Louis Republican. Although a good ways off, the editors of the Republican rightly appreciate llw importance of the victory liiey have achieved to the people of Ohm: 7V Oli i eiettion is Important in many points of view, hut pnrnrul irly as it kills off a el of tlie most vile oliiician that er atriictmi any state, "i.ow ages' i aptuiu ta lain on ihe thrlf; a mnrk it put on Mr Nutty by his own neighbor and associate ( Medary, who has published more lies in the niaiesntan tnan annosi any oilier meoiorn ninnr in the country, will be ousted from his birth of State printer, in hich he has fleeced die Slate without merry, and (nils, alto, of bring rleetefl lo the I 'titled Slates Senate and Brotigh ill no longer be Auditor of Ohio. Hundred of such cattle w ill )m di sm i nod from the ihi!. lie charge, and honest men w ill lake llieir places. The effect will ho of inralrulabla advau luge tu the State, in a moral, politiral and financial view of the case, and we rongraiulalo the projilo of Ohio on having thrown off such a mu of iniquity. Ilrttrr lav Tltose who wish It. call to mind the Waring of Mr. Clay under adverse circumstances, will remember lhat he ia the same man now thai he was in III 13, when, after being huulcd for twenty years by the bloodhounds of parly, be returned lo Kentucky, and with an eloquence and au energy whirh no modem mau ran rival, addressed his cuntiiiueuta and neigh bort: " Il is now more than forty year,' said Mr. Clay, " since ! came here a poor and friendless youlli. 1 w as taken by the hnnl by your fathers, and led lo fame and fortune. All lhal 1 am and have been, I owe to Iheir generous kmdnett and steady confidence. And now I have come to spend the evening of my day among their children. I feel like the ttag who has been king hunleo, mid who return, at last lo die upon ihe ipM whence he tinned in vigor and hope. The ems of party have beea lour barking nl my heelt, and the hlood hounds of personal malignity are springing al my throat, but rising to hit full height, and looking round with flashing eye on hi detainers, who hail moigled with the crowd ol hearers, i Mem una y fat now at t ever id ." Old Hoi Ysttjui HlrkorTt Put.a'tv own State rejects htm, Thi was not (he way Krniueky treated Hxanv ('lay in IKR, wlien the elected a Loco Oovemour, hut Tennostee, the Hermitage District, (the residence of Uen. jAratog ,) has turned on the old hero, and gives an increased Whig majority for (lay. In IBhl, Junes received in this precinct H3 ynie, Polk M. Now, Clay receives 116 votes, Polk Mil Was there ever a more pointed and galling rebuke 1 Davidson county, in which is situated Nashville, and in which the Old General resides, gives In Clay the aame tnajoriiy that il gave to Jouea, lo wit, fivt dresl and EigHtylhrtet rVnllra Amrrlrnst Olebrttilosi In If. York The New York paper contain a description of a procession, etc., got up by die Natives of lhat city, in honor of ihe victory achieved in the election of Iheir Congress and Rrpr-eatativa lirkeL, The turn out wai large, but not at large a peeled. There wtrt delegations present from several of Ihe neighboring cities and towns. Addresses were delivered and resolutions adopted. An viptotiou look place on board of a model ship drawn in the procession, through the carelessness of n cigar amoker. Seveial persoua were seriously injured one or two fatally, It it feared. Mir mo A a1 l.toitl.ATl'Rlt. Tht Senate will be unanimously Lorofneo It in all. It Wat the same last year. The House will stand 44 Locolocot lo !) Whigt. AlfiliilioBi of thfi Prraldrttllnl 4HrloN A few ofiaiririendsol ihe preis areagiiatingthequelion Who shall be the next Whig candidate for the Presidency!" Of emirte those editors, thus engaged, are exercising a privilege lielonging to all. Of lite propriety of involving the coun try in another contctl at this time, there is room for very te rious doubt. Let us preserve the integrity, tho harmony of the great Whig WMy. This should lie the great object of our labor now. There will be no difficulty in accomplishing it, if we pursue Ihe course dictated by prudence and sound Mil-icy. The country needs our serviret The enemies of her prosperity niid peace are iu the ascendancy in Ihe Councils of the Nation. I hey must he watched, checked, cxpotcd. They must be held lo a strict accountability for i II iheir tint of o mission at well commission. Plus duty, if well performed, will require our undivided attention, If we involve ourselves in a controversy about the succession, thus eaily, its only effect will he lo distract our attention and divide our sirrugth There ia a time for all things, and a great abundance ol il yel remains, for Iho eonsidcraliiw of the question "Wlto shall bs) Ihe next Whig candidate for the Presidency'" A Mini to llrary t iny. The Whigt of Philadelphia and New York are seriously considering a proposition for raising a fund of 530,000 for the erection of a itnlue in honor of Mr. Clay, Mr. Clay will live longer in ihe heans of hit countrymen lhan hi hfrlet marble. History will take rare of hi fame, and posterity will appreri ata hit worth. Yet, we cannot but regard with approbation Ihe suggestion of ihr Philadelphinntand New Yorkers. Hen-ry Clay need no evidence lo convince him of the devo-liou of hit friritdt, but he deserves such a token of the love of htt countrymen, and it could nol bul awaken pleasing emotions in hit patriot heart. If I tie proposition is carried out, Ohio will ask the privilegt of ruutrihuiinf, a lilwral portion of the requisite turn. She has twice declared her attachment to ihe man, and she will not bo behind hnr titters in any move ment in honor of hit illustrious name ami scrvires. Crreip0Hdritc4 mf thm ? HlaU Jmmrmmt. Buffalo, Nov. 15, 1844. Since my last, the political contest in the several Stales has been to far concluded, na lo "settle iiidical.ons" pretty clearly, in regard to Uw national result and the disastrous cotise-quencen of these indications are a'ready apparent in the depression of ihe fanning interest We are now upon the very eve uf the close of uavigaiioit both Itike and canal the precise moment when produce always experiences an improvement in price. But die sue rest of "Free-Trade" doctrines nl the (lolls, has revcrirtl thia order of things, and we nro about iu close produce operations for the season, with a all' ittfr mu ktt! The subjoined prices before and since the elec-t.oii, will show the state of iho market Imlh in New York and Hull'nloj und they fully sustain my position, singular as such depression may apjK'nr. New York quotations on Nov. first, gave Hour hi $l,H to 4 ,1)7.J, end wheal at $ I ,l per bushel. Un the liiili an interval of eleven dnvs, tlw election having intervened flour stood nl Jjt'l,fi.'$. and wheat was sold al ilJ els. Al Buffdo. oti die 3j ol Oct. flour wasbrisk at SU. and w heal at hi c la. Yesterday nnd to-day ihe top of die market is $ to $ L.03 for flour, and If) ris. lor wheal. Wool has suffered still more. Indeed the fall uhii this article is re-nlly ruinous. The lulest published prices show a decline of five cents per pound, nl Albany bul our dialers have nil vices by w hu h liiey are now governed, in refusing lo purchase, except at viill greater reduction. In anticipation of tho repeal of the Tariff, we henr lhal everywhere al the east, preparations are being made to meet lhal national calamity. This it ia which has shaken the market; the destruction of the home market we have enjoyed, must needs leave a vast supply of food and of raw materials lor matiuiucttiriiig upon ine nanus oi me prouueers, woe mi-ded iu the surplus of the next crop. Every one fears to invest in new manufacturing establishments; and here there ia a teueral abandonment of all arrangements for the erection of new cotton or woolen mill, cVc, to far as we have heard. In thit city a lot had lieen selected, and much of l lie slock iihsrrihe.f. for a second colloo farloiy; but the turcest of "Tree-Trade" bus sloped all, and vetoed the wholo under-Inking.In oolitic, vou see the Empire Stale has nominally gone for Po'k. 1 tay nominally, because I find ait no not think New Voik ha so gone, in Inrl. I o lie plain, there nie some strange sR'Culiitioiis alloal, iu regard lo coming event. You well know thai Ihe delegates of New York lo the Baltimore Convention were pledged to sustain Mr. Van Burent and the deep hearl-biiriiiiig of dial gentleman's friends at hit avm- aged ilelent. have never lieeu made a secret, wen: rtvtngt is notr within thrir vower. By casiiue ihe vole of New York for Mr. Van Burnt. Ihev deleat Mr. Polk's election by ihe Colleges, and catry the election into the House, lo which hit nnme mui pc retained wtin roia nun I lay. i ins wonm give die Moose an opportunity 'he northern Loco unit Whigs combining in gel rid of Texas, and lo throw ihe wholo toulheru mai hiiiery overboard, by milling Mr. Van lluren again in Ihe Presidential Clia r. Such a union, at a rlaticeof evil, would be very likelv, it is argued, to take pi are. Nol only would it get rid of Texas, but il could hardly lad to save Ihe Tariff iiiiisiiitirh as no combined aitark upon thai, by a conin!lerit force for its overthrow, could then he made. The argument, namely, lhal this would cause a breach between northern and touiljern loco locos, is met by Ihe fuel lhat nothing whatever can avert that catastroplte, the seeds of which are a heady sown, and will shoot vigorously during Ihe Congressional session of the ensuing winter. The great fear of the minor norlhcm loco is, that Mr. Calhoun will be, in fart, President, by having Ihe confidential cur of ihe President elecl. This ihe northern lenders well know he will have and therefore Ihcy do not share the fear, bul realize the pos livo dread of lh- consequence. They seem lo be well aware, loo, that one of these consequences u'lll be a deaf ear and a cold shoulder lo Itn-m at ihe White House: and that the Nulhlier II push h ultra plans of tout Item domination pi a point which will be ruinous to themselves, if not in the Union. All this i rank ling in the bosoms of Mr. Van Buren's friend nud has prohiilily given rise to the thought lhal an nmlmsh at-tnrk may overthrow the man who has lieen forced upon Ihein, and trail der victory to their own slandurd al the very moment when all tupHied ihem disM'rvd m foil retreat. W heiher siirh a blow is lo lie virmk, of course I have not the meant of kliow-ins; I onlv know that the sagacity of ihe old Albany Itcgeucy hat been seldom al limit m seeking il ow n advancement; and there are iliosriHiloiieitig to their par ly, who would nol liesilate to appiauil Ihe patriotism ol torn an art, ns a means of averting uulional calamines which are now viewed very dilTerenily as approaching realities, from what they wero w hilu they only eri,iiued to the contingent tuiure. fV tit I to AsMericamiam lit ' Inr Install. The Commercial It ul let in, of Cincinnati, hilherio a neutral paper, hat adopted a new name and with it the prinriplct of the American Hrpublican (tarty. It is now railed "Amtri ran HfpuNkan tMMin." Iu editors have heretofore be longed to the iocnfoco parly, as we Irarn from llw Atlaa. Humored Aooolnitarttlt The Cincinnati Uaiellt of yesterday says thai it is reported that Dr. N. M. Mills., of Columbua, brother-in-law of ih President, has boon appointed by him Second Assistant post, mailer General, in place of J. W. Tvtoa, resigned. Wa give the rumor for wbai it it worth, Stranger things lhan thit hae happened. Encoi'H A(K Your, own. Those who need ihe service of n Culler, or waul a first rate article of Cutlery, ran lie accommodated by our friend FfcHTOit, on High, second door Mow Rich street, Mr. F. is a good mechanic and deserves encouragement. H arfkr's Ii.i."mikatki BiBi.it." No. It. hat been received by our friend Ki ley, ol this city, al hi bookstoie. A lllnrlt 1 ampler, " ' " And all the People said Amen!" Lost nr La nun to MrXHAKirs. We areinfoimed upon unquestionable authority, lhal three Merchants tn this city had contemplated building, or having built, each, a ship apiece hi case ol the election ol Henry Clay lo the Presidency. Since, however, it has lieen rendered ct rlain lhal Mr. Polk is elect- est, they have abandoned the idea, fearing that the pohev wmcn win ie puisueo ny mm ami his uim, woo hi so jurai-ne busiiiesa nd commerce, as to render ilie enleriirtie coo- leinplaied by them uuprofuabfo. Thus have Ihe nierlianies and latnireri of Fell s Point, in ihis one inslarco, been de- prived the opHirtumiy of otHaiuing employ ami sharing in Hi ilistriouliiiii ol al least sixty iiiousaito tioiiars. e are well assured lhal Ihe gentlemen who purposed Unhliug these vessels, woolii have entered into couiracts lor tiavnig them I in i U iuimetliAlely nfier it had been anuoimced lhat Henry I "lay had been chosen lo prcsidu over Hut Nation as its Chief Magisirate. W helher tunes will he any worse nr nol remains lo lie ex perienced. One thing however is certain, that such men as those nientioneil above, who, lo n great rairnt, eomim ttlui wily, have airealy hist commence, and wilt, we have i douhl, wiltioiil llieir means, from nut course we tear rv nint h many will have rnii to reerel lhal they voted for James IV. rolh. tiattimore i' at tun. PftuJrrT Kftorar.D in tiik llr.Ali. We understand that arrangements had nearly been completed lo start a large oollcii mnuiitnrltiriiig etinhlishmeiil in this city , with a cai- lal ol st(Kt,tai, ilie luumlaliou oi wmrn woum have net-n laid this IhII, bill ns the people of the United Stales have de cidrtl in favor of ihe Bnlih mamilarturet, the design will be aiiamloned. l hu an annual tiistriiMtiion oi irom twenty to thirty thousand dollar in wages, whirh would have found iheir way to our merchants, tailors, shoemakers, cVc, and ihe Inrmert in our vieuuly. is prevcnlcil, and die money will in stead lie shipped lo pay the wng.-s of British operalives. ii was m emis uera ion oi in s iarr. orimao v. uiai a tour- nevmaa slioeuiaker't shop in this cily was ilhiiniualvd on lliurMlay evening, l (icii atttt. Tiik Broianina. The probnbiliiyof Polk's election has couipelk-d tevei nl large manufacturers in this and Albany eiiuniie lo adopt measures for the immediate curtailment ol tlwir business.-1 roy ( iV. i f ii atg. Tnr. Ft RT Fruits Several capitnlistt, who had inten- tied lo rxiM'iid more lhan a million of dollars in Ihe erection of iron and other establishment in Ihe Valley of Virginia, have given up their projects, tinre trie result of ine t'tesiiii ii lial election has been known. So with a contemplated out lay iu cot lou and woollen manufactories m lite neighborhood ul HnriH-r' Ferry. 1 tut may Do eaiien an euon to rrenir a ptinir ; nui ii ine statement of farts have lhat effect, we cannot help it. Tlir blesainga of Loeoloro insinbibty in public alUirs are yel lo lie developed in many wajs. Hinrhcffcr ( IVt.J Repub. We have hrnnl of contracts in this cily for building. See,, amounting to some 12 or I.V0"0 dollars, which have been abandoned on hearing lhat Mr. Polk was circled. It was in tended also lo (Hit the ttlas Works ami lotion ear lory into oietaiiou. Ihilh are aoandonnl h nt ting nme$. We learn that purchases of land and iron ore banks have been made in Ballunoru county, and lhal the necessary preparation were in a it ate of great forwardness to creel two extensive iron works, one on ihe York turnpike, and ihe other in a difli reni direnmn, w hich were in have oceii put tn oiie ration without delay. I he ticieai oi air. i My, ami ine apprehension of a reduction of the present duly on iron h-ive mused the projectors to uivmi operations, and we Irani lhal ihe projects, if nol abandoned nliogelhi r, w ill at least be n Mandril lor some lime. Tin parties concerned in these en- leiprises are entirely di.linct. Each of these contemplnled esiablishment would have given employment lo a large mini- le r of workmen, ami ImmI to nearly one tlioiisaiul persons, nnd would liesoh-s have added lo tlw wi-aUh of thu com. try and .State. Halt. Amir, The Troy patter announce thai a factory building in lhat town has been tlioroiiliiiued, making two tins week. Another has been slopiei al Rochester, and one at Rahway. Ibid. The Troy Whig Bays nnte of the Locofuco friends of ihe Tariff who voted for Polk, excuse themselves for ihul senseless suicide by saying lhal then knew the Setfcire would he It Vr, ami therefore, the Tariff would be taken care of, it Mr. Polk ami the whole anti-Tariff ticket w.re elected ! That it what we call pretty cool, al any rate. They could trust to Iho W lugs lo save diem ami ihe rotuilry from entire tk'slriic-lion, while they indulged themselves in the luxury of doing all they could tndrstioy it. Il was. we tupmr. on the same priiK-iple lhal llw l.ixrty party voted for the Mact eaudidaie. Aa ArkuotvlfltnrHl "Whig ndinilled freely all the evil of Slavery, and ihtta imposed umhi it Ihe duly of presenting Mr, Clay , who they called ihe embodiment '( iheir prmt iplet, according to the stale of factt. In doing to, we were coniH'lled lo carry ihe war, even mln Ihe enemy s ramp, and use fact lhal demo crats could not use, because they wereenunlly guilty ; to lhat tho Whigs may ihnnk themselves, and Mr. Clay may thank hit friemit, if Lilteriy men have, in any way, contributed to his defeat Morning Herald. Here ts an admission limi ine mug were rernrnen aa enemies" that the Liberty party carried tho war into the cnemv's camp," and thus "eoiiirihnird lo his defeat" (Mr, Clay's Very wed. This we knew More ( bul place it upon ireoni now, as pan ot inn nisiory ni ie nines. I hit plan w or ken very well in new i ork atler Air. nir I ney's mission ; Ihii nol quite tn well in I lno. We shall see 1 whal llw LiWrty party make by an avuwal of hoslthly lo llw things. tin. s.nrjn. Ohio. The ofilcial vole has nol yel been piihlisl.ed. hut wr think Mr. Clay's majority will reach 7,000. Nobly have the Whigs icrformrd their duty in this Slate. Il it a source of i nile ami satisfaction to every Unman, lhal while so many of her sitter Slniet have deserted iheir principles and covered themselves with dishonor, Ot io hat remained firm, and comes out uf the conflict virtorioii with her bnnnert living, Mednry aptieali lo his Locofuco brethren lo redeem the Stale! Heautijui Rt demption! It amounts to no more nor Irss thanthe're-rlec-imn ol the State Printer and the division nf thesnoilsofollirr ! W e have lieard hat one imriNMe ei ores veil bv the Whim, and that it, lhat as Ohio it unquestionably Whig, to she shall forever remain, Oir defeat in the Union maket il doubly im portant that the State should he W'hig. W have long been the victims of aditatlmut Stale policy, and now that we have ihe power let us flxercisei it in behslfof our own domestic interest!. Deserted bv the General (iovemment, let us lake rare of ourselves. Our foot is on the neck n lcofocmm in Ohio and lei it never be removed. Keep it down, and never lei iit hydra head be reared again Lebanon Star, From Ui New York Tnbuno. Honor lo the Patriot. The Philadclphians, we understand, contemplate a grand id tillinc letlimonial to our Ureal Statesman. They pro- nit raising, by small aiibseriptioiii none to exceed five dol larsthe sum of l went v thousand dollars, to he paid to Pow ers, 'he Sculptor, for a ttatuc of Mr. Clay, to be placed in a suitable building in one of the public aquarrs of the city. Probably since the death of Ihe Father ol hit Country there has never at any time lieen aorrow so pervading nnd to profound that winch loitovva ine discovery inai mr. slat uucicaieu. The intelhirenl and riithl-minded regard hiin with an affec tion which no oilier public man ever inspired, and which it only surpassed by lhal devotion to country which induced ihe de-tire ol hit election to the Presidency. Henry Clay is defeatedworse than thai, the People are defeated and the last suffer. For him Ihe Presidency had few If any attractions, except inch aa it wat invested with by patriotism. It could add nothing to his greatness or lo his reputation. Who would nol rather be, Henry Clay than be Pretulcnlt II there be ny turn, we pity mm. now true, now mum truer man ever before, are the following lines by Whillier: 'HE IS NOT FALLEN.' NotFallkh: No! as well the tall And pillared AhVgauv. fall At well Ohio' giant tide Hull backward on its mighty track, At he, Columbia's hoxj and pride, The slandered and the sorely tried, In his triumphant course turn hark. II B ia rot Fallxsj! Seek to bind The chain les. and unbidden wind; Oppose the lorreiil't headlong rourie, And turn nside the whirlwind's force; But deem ye not ihe mighty mind Will cow er before Ihe blast of hate, Or quad at dark and rnuseleia ill For though all else be desolate, Il stoops not from its high estnlo A Marius 'mid the rum tlill. lit: is not FALl.ru! Every breeze That wanders o'er Columbia's bosom, From wild Penobscot's forctl trees, From ocean shore, from inland seas, Or where ihe rich Magnolia's blottom Floats, snow bku, on the sultry wind, Is booming onward on his ear, A homage to hit lofty mind A meed Ihe falling never find, A praise which put riot t only hear. Stak or the West! A million eyea Are turning gladly unto him) The shrine ol old i dotal net Before hit kindling light grows dim ! And men awuke as Irom a dream, Or nivteort dnzzhug lo betray : And bow trcfore hi purer lieain, The earnest of a better day. All Hail! die hour it hastening on When. vainly tried by S lander ' tl.unc, Columbia shall behold her ton Unharmed, wi.lmut a laurel gone, At from the flames of Babylon The angel guarded trial ramel The Slanderer shall le silent (hen, His pell shall leave the mind of men, And higher glory wait ujiou Tlie W fcsTfcKS pATitiuT'a future fame. For Ihe Ohio Stale Journal. MrtHRt. Editors : The follow in? nuestiont were tenl a few davt nro lo ihe Ed.tor of Ihe Sialrsinnii, with a rrnnril that ha would insert and amtwer litem; lot some reason or uther he is sih-nl alxait Ihem ; will you give Ihem an iiiM-rtiou T l. it a religious man's pnlitirul vote m lint rounlry con sidered an endorsement ol character mural as well as political I1 1. Are ell those rcliriom person who voted for Thomas Jefferson, and who now identity themselves with his princi ple under Ihe si vie o " Jt'ller soman Democrat, lo Iw con- anlered as sanctioning Jelterson's infidelity I 3. Are all those reliK on imtsoiis who voted for a certain individual lor llw Yire-Prisideurv, and who hail hun as an blt ttattiman. lo be considered at approving of llw well- known deviations nl his social and private life t . Are or are not piHUiral relaiaiii in this country wnotiy ilistinci from relivivut : nud is nol the atiemiit lo mingle iho two a great error' ol other times and nations again! which our Constitution has lcen rarelully giiantedt o. uuiu uot the requisition lhal religious men snouui vote for those candidate only, who not only arr, bul always have been of i elision, vr oi uncxreptionibly moral character, either deprive iho relirnius ronunuuitv of Ihe elective fran chise almost entirely, or else, drive them io llw selection of uieir own ratHiioatea f ii. SuiitHisa ihe rhurrhes alt combine, am) hereafter put up iheir own eaudiilules, lurfi as ihay rna avprort in ail rupee it ; will not ihe cry of " Church and Slate '' ring from one cud of the land io itie olta-rr 7. Of Iwoeiilt, such ui llw prescnlaiion by tlw great political pat lie ol two caw folates, neiiher ol whom hnt in all resjierls, hi unqnalitiid approval, conscientiously seeking what he beieret lo be I lie Ih.-sI iuleresli ul his country, which will a wie aud good man rltoosv f U, V ill those political friends with whom yon tvmpalhiie, and many uf wliotn are worthy of the Inglicit esteem, here-alter ak our votes for none Ihii men uf religious, or tiruys mnexieptionaldu moral rhnrarler f If Is tl nol trespiissmg on religious men's rights, to attempt to diriaie lo ihem, who they shall vole Inr, lo iwrform for them political foiielious is il nol ihe selling up of a political " in- sei recy of lh- ballot-box ; and whal du you call that spirit which assails a class of luruou poiiiriacrKinls, when iub-lic sentiment deprives Ihem of the poor privilege of dettnd-ine themselves T I'liese were tent tn the Statesman oiw more il may be well to add: 10. la il consilient with the freedom of our institution!, and ihe Mirny of our election to say, '' If vou vote my way, or refuse from voting I'll attend your rhuirh, and if you don't I won't V and would not a e a, accepting such a bribe, or being overawed by such a threat, cover himself with shame, aye, nud everlasting contempt T " AMICUS. The ftpoila. It will be an amusing scene to wittiest Ihe division of Ihe i noils of victory. Htnonir the several divisions ol the grand ar my of Lncofocoism. 'I Iw Van lluren, the Cass, ihe Burhan- aid the rvler cohorts, will earh etix'Cl to Iw remembered in ihe distribution, nud no doubt w ill all get something. The 1 anil men und tlw free l raiie men witi expect lo iw iiuty represented, and plea-anl will be the meeting of ihese null- iMlean interests, in the l-almiet nl Pic newly elected heatt ot roirressive limorrarv. I iw lexan noeruiaior. Willi ooih iKM-kets sniffed lull of bond ami grnnlt, will Iw there, eager to consummate the rrnnd irheinc of Aiinexniion and lo com mence thu purchase and driving of slaves into ihe laud of promise; and cheek hy jowl with mm, Will Po Ihe Atwilitionist, who has lain red ellh ienlly with him in H e turmoil of the contest for Polk and Texas. Cai.iiovn and Bihnky have equal claim upon the gracious patronage of the President elect; ard when the bland Mr. Pot. a thai) introduce them to each other, and joining Iheir hands, rerom mended ihem In walk in peace hereattcr. nt nreinren iu a common cause, ine iiropn-ecy will lie fulfilled, w hich said, "The hon and ihe lamb shall he down together, nnd a little child shall lend Ihem." There it a conirideuce of position and purpn e between these npoatles of disunion in the Sooth and North, which points them mil as tuilnlile nines; aim we nope mat tne iraternity whirl) has been eilahli-hcd by their joint efforts for llw election of poi.K.tiie Extension of Slavery, and ihe establishment of Free Trade, will Iw perpetual I want iful in their lives, in iheir death Uiey should nol be divided, Cirt. Atlas, I English, P roach nad Atnericna Mercantile ITInrtae. An intereatinp; pamplilct has iuat nnpoarcd in England from the pen of Mr. llnyley, (Surveyor to Lloyd's, relative lo the mercantile marine of Great Britain, the United State a, and France. These statements, compiled from official records, may be relied on. A summary of the most striking facts in the pamphlet is annexed: The totnl number ot British vessels built and mpiHtered in Europe and the colonies, in ISO?, was ,H1, ineaaunner according1 to the then mode IJ7, 500 tons. In 1812, the number was 1,481 shins of y(J7,ti00 tons. In 18011, (there is no return for 1802,) tho t ol.nl number of vessels belonging to the Britinh empire was a0,8ir2, the tonnage 2,l()7,8fjy ; in 181 tho aliips were 110,185, with 3, filit,H50 tons. 1 he ratio ot increaie tn America is much greater lhan this; but the returns specify the tonnnge only. t he amount in I7JH was 48,77 tons, which in 18.J4 had grown to 1,758,907 tons. In 1821, the total tonnage of British vessels entered in American ports was 7fj,lHXJ tons ; this had increased in 18.(4 to V40, 700 tons; the American tonnnge havinrr also risen from 71,8()0 in the flrst period to W1.1W tons in the Inst The carrying trade between France and tho United States is now lost tn England, which in IH-.il had 37,300 tons in that traffic : in the following year it decreased to 24,400 tons and has since virtually ceased. The French tonnage, in the American trade was 4,700 in 1821 and rose until J KM, when it reachod 35,100 ; but during the aame period, the American, roae from lti,i200 to 172,000 tons. The total tonnage boloniring to France was 004,100 tons in 18j, and in mn only ul7,10U, though the number of smaller veaacls had increased. In 1827, the ships were 14,;i2; in lft&i they had risen to irhvxit. 1 he returns no not extend later. Losses at Sea. -Putting aside sliiiw condemned. captured, and broken up, the vessels lost in the Inst live years is aa billows: In lHW. In 1H40. In 1841. In 1812. In 1813. 1148 1083 1053 1085 1321 Among which, two modes of destruction fix attention, from the notion of carelessness lhat attaches to the loss : Rundown 33 50 4H 35 45 liurnt 18 24 15 24 23 Missing 111 57 5G 5! I 80 The proportion of losses between British and foreign vessels is Itriiish !H1 804 750 608 970 Furoign ! 321 W7 W 440 Tho particulars relating to the crews are solely for the year 1813; and they give the crews saved of 1,011 vessels, of 157 part saved, and of 144 all lust. Steam Marine or Great Britain. The increase in tho private steam marine during the Inst twenty-five years has been prodigious. In 1814, there was one steamer of GO tons in the United Kingdom, and lhat belonged to Scotland. Next year, Great Britain had eight steamers three English, five Scutch. In 1810V wa had twelve England five, Scotland seven. In 1817, Ireland made a beginning with one, and the total of (lie United Kingdom was four teen. In 1818, the Southern Saxon shut ahead having got ten steamers, Scotland eight, Ireland still sticking at one. The proportions of last year are 010 for England, 128 for Scotland and 81 fur Ireland, Hasorll flaMelnrliiat. It would seem from the following, and similar paragraphs, lo be found in tne eastern papers, that dm worth of Hussell's Planetarium, begins to be under' ood and that ihe genius and skill of the inventor are, in some measure, appreciated, now that the fruits of his labors are lost to Ihe couulry, Wa are not without hope thai a sufficient inducement will Iw pr-sealed lo vur fellow cititen, Mr. Kutsell, lo justify the erection of another Planetarium Russell's Planetarium. Our renders are aware that thin magnificent structure lias been recently destroyed by rire at the burning of the Providence the atre, i tie loss in dollars has been estimated at ten thousand, but that is a poor wny indeed to calculate the loss which elementary astronomy has suffered by iu uesintcuon. l ne inventor and constructor ot the planetarium devoted many years of studious thought and almost incessant labor to itt production. Thou sands of dollars were expended upon it, and at least the patient and perserving experimenter was rewarded by a complete, and so far as mechanical ingenuity could do it, in the present stale of astronomical science, a perfect model of the solar system, showing with exactness and beautiful precision, the revolu tions of the d liferent planetary bodies around tho sun, their diurnal motion, the motion of the satellites or moons, &c. Sic, The operation of the machinery was beautiful, and conveyed at one glance a more correct idoa of our system than whole days of pa tient study. Ihe planetarium was a triumph of American ge nius and American industry. It stood alone a proud and noble contribution to the science of astronomy. it belonged to America, and should have been deposited, as an enduring monument to its inventor and the land he had honored, in some public depository under the ownership of government But it was suffered to go almost a begging, lit Europe its merits were known, and it was sought for. A good price was offered fur it (here, and the proprietors were determined, even at some sacrifice of time and money, lo give the people of this country an opportunity to behold this grea creation of one of their own countrymen before it should be taken from tho land. And in this laudable and praiseworthy work they were engaged when the destroying element burst upon them and the planetarium is a tiling that was. Additional attractions were used by the proprietors in their exhibition of the planetarium, tending-to illustrate it The grand panorama, or moving telescopic view of the heavens, covering a snace of upwards of 5000 square lect of canvass, and repre senting upwards of two hundred thousand distinct objects ; tho proper motion and position of our earth aud moon, with the other planetary bodies in the stellar universe; exact appearances of several of the most celebrated comets ; immense clusters of re mark utile nebula-, die. &c. This, with other apparatus of a similar nature, comprising tlie most brilliant and splendid diagrams, of the sular system and sidereal heavens, were totally consumed by fire, leaving Ihe enterprising proprietors destitute of tho means of prosecuting tlair valuable and instructive labors. Boston VoL In C'bnrnrlrr. I On Friday niirht last, lite elite of tlw loco parly in thit place, headed by the wouht-bc-govertMir, Tod, who wa billowed bv lfobbtu, the fiddler on the occasion, paraded our streets dnriiis; the whole nit;hl, (wilh the exception ot Ihe lime speiil iu pouring tiuwn "poke-juice, j nootuig, niiiioomg, niss-ing ami groaning, in addition to the music by Ifohhin. A spectator might, w iihout any extraoriiinary effort, have imag med thai " the spirit of ihe dam'd" had escaped from tlie nether regions to visit once more ihis earth, "making Ihr night hideout wilh iheir yells." Our quiet village was never More, we venture lo tay, visited by lurh a disgraceful scene of drunk rnness and rowdyism. flnsKV Will not such conduct more closely identify Mr. Tod with the church, the more eseeinlly as il brought him inlo ihe company of ihe very pious othrial, who has taken il upon hutiM'll io testify a lo llw orthodoxy of Air. Tod's r. h-giuu f Trumbull t'hronitte. IlKitnr Cur. Neil in Washington and Franklin, ihe honest historian will transmit him lu future generations, as ihe Patriot who for thirl v sears and more, hail ever Iseen, in crcry emergency, the most prompt lo lly tn ihe rescue of his couinrv, the most whole-souled in his devotion to her several interest lite most successful ta hi clloru to serve and to save her. And what hat betn hit reward t Countrymen! F.ven many of yon who hnve atsiied in the dee I of humor-tihVaiion and rejection, now lhal ihr dent is done and cannot Iw recalled HAN you think of il without shame and remorse I Ifo you not blush at having been areeory to an act so ungenerous lo n fffeat Patriot, and so unjust lo your rounlry 1 Richmond M Viif- A UniTLD fiTAIKS Hr.SATOR ClULI.ESJOKD AT THE Polls. At Ihr Presidential election, in 8l. Louis, some person challenged Senator ilenlnn's vole, on the ground lhal he was nut a rinxcn of the Slate, He was ronsnptently obliged in swear lhal he considered St. Lotus as his place nfresifleiicet Iw was then permitted lo vole. It is something sinxular to see the represent alive of a Stale compelled lo swear w helher he n retideul ol the State or not. Jl aether Horrra from Mr. Acta ana. Mr. Jon (irtarf A pans made another long speech lo m constituent, nt north itnugwaler, Ala.,on eiteesiiay llw Mill. Wc hnve sern but a small portion of ll in tlie Eastern pa tiers. Mr. Aoami snvs : Mr Jackson has rescinded to my summons bill be hat not put himself upon the country, either with regard to hit charge against me, or to my charge against hun. He blusters, but ho retreat. He pours forth invectives, bul he ftmclwa. Ha is entirely mistaken, when he says lhat my add re in llw youiir men of Hoston is a labored altrinnl lo discredit llw testimony of Mr. Krving. I know not whal Ihe testimony of Mr. hrving is. 1 Iw hero's el ceterat, Itrowa and logeraoll, have Inken special rare lo keep out of my reach. I lie jHir-(Kite of my address lo ihe young men ul Ihniott, wa to dn credit the testimony nol of Mr. Krvina. bul of the hero him- tell i anil the first of my witnesses was Aaron Viiil Hrown.hit rorrrsiHHident anil ouhlmher. Ilia note unon ihe main alle gation against me, of iho hero's teller proved il lalse, ami lhal ItniMn knew it lo tw talte and now tlie hem formally gives ii up. Hear him "I Iwlievcil (ays he irom uw ins- closure made to me of the transaction ol 1UP, that Mr. Atlamt surrendered the interest of die United Stales when he look the Nahiiic river as a lmmdnrv between us anil Spain, when he might have gone to the Colorado, if not to llw Kto del None." See how the hero skulk from hit rhirgr, anil lakrs refuge in the Colorado, and Ihe if Nofs uf hi el rt lerat, Ingersoll aud llrnwn. "Such (Iw my ag-iin) wat the natural inter-nice, from the tncls timed by Mr. F.ivinf t ami there it nothing in Uw arruunt now given, lo alter this impression." Hut stuh i Mil the iiilereuce I nun the tarts staled by Mr F.rviug, in the hero's charge against our got eminent. Look buck io ihe charge. There is uo t 'oloratfo, there are no if aWt there. Tlie charge was direrl bohl oinuliHed, Mr. Krving had negiiiiaird a irvnly Iw wrote home for power lo sign ib Spam stood ready to y eld llw Km ti ramie Inr ihe boundary, and our government gave tip lite whole territory Itiween l fie two rivers, having llw opnon tn retain it. And now llw inference from Mr, F.rviug disclosures, ia, not lluil he made a treaty, bul lhat if we hail h.iggled longer, wr might have got tlw Colorado, if n4 the It in del ISonul In tint coutrovci of the hero with himself, whom shall we believe I N in nit lo Your Colore t We adopt and reprint wilh pleasure the following manly setilimeuit Imtn ihe Alexandria ( inset le mt reecl hilly ask very Whig io rend Ihem, Iwfore yielding, even lor a moment, to a Icrbng of despondency. " The indication of lite general determination of the Whigs of the country, to maintain their organisation, as w Il ia defeat as in suecesa, are loo numerous to Iw mistaken, and wo htul the " Union of the Wings." a another prool of the patriotism of llw party. They wdl nover desert their cause or their principles. 'I hey have stood together, shoulder to shoulder, and they have contended nobly lor the best interest aud the best men of the country. In advrrtilj, they have l ha proud contention of knowing lhal they have done all thai men could do, wilh honor and il is no fault of theirs, if adverse results shmild now ensue lo Ihe government and ths people. Year and years hence. Ihe contctl of H U will tw recollected by all good Whig, a iho lime which rriVsf and pmiyrf ihe tint not tm of those who strove for tho elevation ot itenry Clay. Mnml lo oiir rotor THI', NATIONAL FLAG, GALLANT WHIGS! Ul mhen come tnyou. It Is ynur part io stand fast, nnd com nine to do your best for our beloved country." U inthetttr f 'a.) Republican. Mlt iltn Ar. All the LoeoliHMt candidates for Congrats art elected, Tlie delegation in the next llmite will stand: 11 dist. Robert MrCelland, re-el tried. 2d diit. John S. Clnmnan, succeeds L. Lyon. !M dist. James It. 1 1 nut. re-elected. The Legislature will Iw nearly all Loco, elect inr a II. S. Senator for tix years in place of IL. Augustus a. Porter, Whig. Snip'nnw elect! a Whig to the House) the split between ihe Hiruey and anli-llirm-y Loeoloro ha v inr dcfcaird both. though Polk hat A majority in the county. H'eia. Whig titan. Land (Uiritns task Noticr. The Lima Reporter iavs: We observe from Ihe proclamation nf the President lhal the alternate tertioni along the Miami Canal are to be ode red for ale al Upper Sandusky, on the filh ot January next. These lands, as it it probable moil people kiww, Iw within live miles on each side ol the canal, and are alternate lo those see linni granted by Congress lo the Slnte nf Ohio lo aid in const rurt ing taid ranal, Mrtiry of them ha on, or in Ihe vicinity of ths Angl iitr river, and are very valuable puttie are improved, '2,d0 will he tht minimum pi ice. RownrisM a an Profanity.! hi Monday night, a number of boys from Ifover, joined with some Mongmg to our village, led on by a few Polkiles, paraded the streets, yelling ami hooping, a if escaped from a mad house. On pasting the dwrfhng of a highly respectable clergyman, ihey hailod "three groan for ihett ld d prearher." wat then shell ed forth, ami the habitation of the acrurted. could uol have sent forth a mure hideout yell. TWnruirdJ Adrocatt, Total DitrnAViTt. We do not know when or where we have met sirtiger evidener of total depravity, lhan in the following toast, drank by II. II. Robinson, F.ditor ot the Enquirer, al a late " Progressive Democratic " dinner, given to certain Kdiiors in ihis rily. Here il it, read and decide : "Thk Kkntitky Blatk-Lko. He has played hit tail corsf, aud now wails in terror for the lait fmsan." Cut. Oat, St.AUflllTrniita Hoot. The Cincinnati Bulletin of Tuesday says: Thia business commenced in our rily some lime since, ami wr have noticed quite a nutnlwr of wagon loadt al ihe doort of our iiuincrnu Pork Houses. Perhaps 16 or tfU.ntm have Iwen already slaughtered. Prices range from f. io fx.io. as soon as uw weather lumacoHier toe ou- sinesa will increase. It it said that ihe Hon. Htl.Al WmottT. Governor elect of Ihe Stale of New York, will occupy his teat in the U! Slalet Scuate during llw month of Deccmier, He docs not assume htt official dunes as Governor until January. Pork market. Mr. Dakti.kt is again at Ripler. taking in Pork. ny ins nuvcMiscmont, we learn ho wishes to pur chnne 1 '10(H) hogs, lu be delivered at that place. i ms same gentleman paid lor pork, delivered at Ripley last year, thirty-seven thousand dollars. If ii nau not Deen inr tnis sum oi money, it would have been very difficult for tho citizens of this county to have paid their taxes last year. It gnvo great relief to ine people generally, revived rjusinest, and stint' ulated them to further enterprise. it would epiwar that t like sum or bW.OOO. or mnre will be again distributed among thecilixenaof llrown county, Irom tho saino source, tor tho pork ot ine current year. Now, as we understand, tins Pork is purchased for consumption in Massachusetts, with Massachusetts money. All this may fairly be traced to tho Tariff oi itHJ, to the largo increase of workmen, now employed in ihe Kastern States, which increases the demand for Western provisions. Is it not strange, that wo can find men, lots of men, oven those who have received tho benefit of this very money, who do all in their powor to drsiroy this very market? We need not stop tn point out now ii ia aono, mr cvory man wno reiit'cu u u, must know, to repeal the Tariff is to destroy this market, Bro wn Co Examiner. lflr. hildsea Mlllrrisnt. There it truth and force in tlw following, from a letter nf Mr. Child. We commend ihem lo the thoughtful and philosophic reader: I often hear this called a singular delusion ; hut to me it seems hy no means singular. It is the legitimate result of the external theological teaching, which has prevailed, to a great extent, in our churches, ever since our country was colonized by cliris lians. The people have been told, for a series of yenrs, that tho world Would be destroyed by material tire, and that the Messiah would come visibly in the heavens, to reign as king on the earth. It is but one step more, to decide when these events will occur. The Jews, who, in the first advent of a Messiah, expected a powerful prince, to conquer the Uo-tnana aud restore the national glory of Judea, were not more grossly external in their application of the prophecies, than are moat of the theological commentators on the second advent. Yet, unconscious of the limitation of their own vision, they speak with patronizing compassion of the blindness of the Jews. If men applied half as much common sense to their theological investigations, as they do to every other subject, they could not worship a God, who, having filled this world with millions of his children, would liti.il ly consign them all to eternal destruction, except a few who could be induced lo believe in very d i Ilie u It and doubtful explanations nf prophecies, handed down to us through the long lapse of ages. There is, however, a deeper causo for this excitement, than blind theological teaching. Tho old heavens and the old earth are passing away. In other words, the religious sentiment of Christendom is changing; and ot course old theological opinions. wmcn are merely uic garb nt sentiments, are every where falling uff,like tattered and ill-fitting garments. As the church changes, the state inevitably changes, too; and the civil and social condition of man is slowly ascending to a higher plane. i ins is jen, even by those wno deprecate it, and would avert it if they could ; hnd pressing thus on the universal consciousness, its ultimate and most external form is Millcrism. The coming nf a new heaven and a new earth cannot reveal itself to their apprehension through any other medium, than tho onus in which ihey announce it L M. C. Crime aat lu t'oaarsjaraeee. On the 30th September last I hero arrived in Bos ton two persons, hngliahmcrifWhocallcd their names Ellis; the oldest apparently about fifty years of age, tho other, not more than two or three and twenty. They boarded at tlie Pavilion Hotel, passed off as being connected together by relationship, and asso ciated with the gentlemen boarders of the house. It now appears that their real names were Joseph Elder and William Burgess, and that they were fugitives from justice, in England. The younger man, Burgess, was a Clerk iu the Bonk of England, and through his means a number of shares in the capital stock of tho Bnnka, mounting to between forty and fifty thousand dollars, were sold and transferred, the man Elder fraudulently representing himself as the owner of Jie stock, Tlie parties made their escape from Ijondon, and landed from tho steamer from Liverpool at Halifax, and thence travelled through the ('auadns to this city. On Thursday, R. Bond and John Forrester, the former, another Clerk in tho Bank, and the latter, one of the Mansion House Police, arrived in this city, having been on the track of the fugitives for some days. lithe afternoon they arrested Elder at the boarding house in Federal street, and obtained information that Burgees was at NahanL A party of ollicera proceeded to the Hotel, and one of them found the culprit, but by some extraordinary accident, he made his escape from the person who arrested him, and fled. He was heard of from a cottage at Nahnnt, and a boat was yesterday missing from the beach, and the conclusion is, that ho either put out to sea, in the hope of being taken up by a vessel, or that he crossed over to iho main land. Yesterday morning, on opening the cell of Elder, at the Jail, no was found dead, having committed suicide in the night by hanging himself. Wo learn that he had invested his ill-gotten gains in stock and trearury notes, Ihe certificates of which were on his person, when he was arrested, and that these, wjih the money found iu the room of Burgess, at N nli ant, mtko up the sum received by ihem, except about three thousand dollars, which has unquestiona bly been spent. Ilmlon Jltla$ nAor. !. s?oaa1alio of Ohio, The Official vote of the Niate enables us to make a very nearly accurate estimate of the present population of the State, Tho population of the State of Ohio in 1H40 Death in tiik Pulpit. The Rev. Wilson Con ner, a Baptist minister in (ienrgia, fell dead in the pulpit on the fifth Sabbath in June last, after preach ing irom these words "Verily, vnniy i say unio you, the hotiY is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of tho Son of God, and they lhat hear shall live One year ago. thero were more than ninety indi viduals from Virginia holding office under (iovem ment in the District of Columbia, wilh an aggregate annual salary of more lhan 9147,000 while from Maine thore wore not ten. Tho Albany Argus states that the commerce on the Canals of tho Stato. and on the Hudson, has been much greater tins year than in Irl.i. wn the Hth inst there were l5 sail of sloops and schooners at tho wharves, besides the usual number of steam and low boats. Snow. We are informed by a gentleman from New Durham, that there was a fall of snow in that town and vicinity, on Monday last, 4th inst, about two inches in depth. This we believe was the first snow of the season in that region. Do otr Gazette. was 1,M5,0(H The total vote was The ratio of votes to the population was 5 ll-20tht The total vote in 1844 was .ll'JV-MI The same ratio of persons gives l.TI&.tSFi This we aupmaa is just about tho population of Ohio in 1814. This ratio will give about a, 100,000, as Ihe population of Ohio 1850. We think the result will be greater than that. Ohio will then be the second' State in the Union.rtnd it is not impossible that ten years more (lrjtiO) will make il tlie first Cin. Chronicle, StMFt.F. CtrRK for CrousV We find in the Journal of Health the following simple remedy for tins dangerous disease. Those who have panned nights of intense agony at tho bedside of loved children win trcasurn it up aa an invaluahle piece ol information. If a child is taken with croup, instantly apply cold water, ice water if possible, suddenly and freely to the neck and chest, with a sponge. The breathing will almost inatanily be relieved. So soon as possible lot the atmerer drink as much as it cant then wipe it dry, cover it up warm, and soon a ouiet slumber will relieve the parent's anxiety and lead tho heart in thankfulness to the powor which has given to tho pure gushing fountain inch medical qualities. JLnlfsl from Afrirn. The lost arrival from Africa brings favorable ac counts of the condition and pros pec la of the Amer ican colonies on we const. The Methodist Epincupal Church has three nlacea of worship among the colonists ot Cape Paltnas. The Rev. John Seys, in an interesting account of his tour round tlie various stations, thus describes them : One at Harper, a little town on Ihe summit of iho cape where the Government House is located, one at Mount Emory, about a mile in the interior, and a substantial little church at Tubman town, three miles farther still. The people at Harper can easily attend at Mount Emory, but it is somewhat inconvenient for a!l tho Tubman members and friends to do so, so I promised them a quarterly meeting in their own neighborhood, and accordingly all went uut to Tubtnun aud enjoved a delightful season. They are a plain, unrefined, but honest and spiritual people, I used to love much to go out to that part of the circuit and preach Ihe word ot life to them." Mr. Seys accepted an invitation to visit the mission station at Cavalla, under the care of the Rev. John Payne, ot the Protestant Episcopal mission. Hu thus speaks of it: Mr. Payne's mission establishment is a perfect model for others. I have never seen greater order. decorum and regularity any where. There are two schools, one for boys, and the other for girls. Theco are an natives with but one or two exceptions. Mrs. rayne has the enure charge ot tho female deportment, which is in a separate building altogether from the boys' school. At the time of my visit they had twenty-eight boys and seventeen girls. Tho regular complement of girls is twenty, but duiing Mr. and Mrs. Payne's temporary absence last year at the time of tho difficulties with the natives, ono of these I in Jo girls was accidentally drowned, one hnd gune to visit her parents, and another was sick. The parent of these children live mostly in tlie immediata neighborhood, and keep up a constant intercourse wim them. I did nut visit the girl's school, but with the bnv't I was perfectly delighted. The exorcises in reading, isiQie History, geogrsfiy, the elements of natural fhilosophy, arithmetic, and writing astonished nie. was invited lo preach to Mr. Payne's native congregation in his neat bamboo chapel situated in tho midst of a large town near tlie mission premises. The natives turned out well and behaved soberly and decorously. Mr. Seys describes the colonists at Cape Pal mas as an industrious and moral people, and says that thev have a very efficient police. The editor of the Liberty Herald thus speaks of ine ue pan tiro irom Monrovia ol the U. 0. ship Macedonian, Commodore Perry : "We feel emotions of sadness al the departute of this vessel. The deep interest in our welfare at all limes manifested by (he Commodore, by Captain Mayo, and the gallant officers of this sthp their readiness to lend us on eveiy occasion all the aid of their influence, and ihe dignified and gentlemanly carriage of all with whom it has been our pleasure tn lorin an acquaintance have begotten an attachment not frequently conceived by casual and briof intercourse. The people of the United States need entertain no apprehension of the high place they occupy in the estimation of the world while they tend such representatives abroad. May the hand that Inlh been around them a shield f rom the pestileoco of Africa, conduct them safely to tlie bosom of their tnmiues. The Africa's Luminary of September 4th aavs the colony of Liberia is in a prosperous condition. The colonists are about appropriating $150 to the re- uumpuon oi nsitvo Children Irom slavery. From Uw IVrrytburgh Miami of Lake Erie." MuanRR. Information havinff been receivpit hm said to have emanated from an individual in the New-York Stale Prison, that some time early in April last, a murder was committed near this place, our Citixens turned out and after two nr ihrf dt-.t search, a body was found in the woods, about a mil irom me roan, partially buried in a root hole. Near the body was also found a black fur hat with a ball hole through it The murdered person had on acot-ton shirt with a linen collar and bosom, but so decayed as lo leave no other mark if any was ever upon it There was also a black silk cravat around tlie neck. The body although much decayed, showed evident signs of violence ; and tnkun in connection with the clothes found in the river, an account of which was published some weeks since, leaves no doubt that a most fnul and brutal murder has been perpetrated i but nothing has yet transpired to lead to tho discovery of who the murdered person was, ui miL'rv iruui. Rumor says that there were tiro rwrtnns nmrdisnxl at the same lime tint they were travelling West with a horse and buggy and that tliev cam faun Cleveland or beyond. tt? We hope the Press generally, will notice the above, as it may lead to a discovery of who the murdered person or persons were. DisTarsainoOcciiaRr.irt. The Clermont Cotir. ler says an explosion look place in the Distillery of Mr. Samuel Per.n, in Miami township, on Wednesday last, by which a Mr. Bttrgor, was almost instant ly Kitieii, anu a ir. uanden, so severely injured that tt is thought he cinnot survive. The vessel that exploded was a large cask in which ihe boor w. hnil. ed by turning steam into it Tho cause of the accident we believe is unknown and unaccountable explosions of tho kind being of very rare occurrence, Mr. Darius Porin and another gentleman wore within a fuw feet of tho vessel when it exploded, anil uimipn pnmirniiu oy mo snocK,uiey lurlunaluly sustained but little injury, Suicina. Mr. M. II Jameson, of Orange, Richland county, committed suicide on Monday morning last, by shooting himself throutrh the brain with . ri. flu 11. committed tlie ,ct in tlie barroom of Mr. T. Smiirr', hotel, while hi, fellow boirdera were et breekfmt. Wo le.rn he left letter which limy vive Home cluo lo the iim Uo i jruung uuui of good Handing in community.